Pharmaceutical compositions comprising orgotein and their use

ABSTRACT

Pharmaceutical compositions comprising, in a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, an effective unit dosage amount of orgotein, the non-proprietary name assigned to members of a family of globular, soluble metalloprotein congeners whose compact conformation is maintained by chelated divalent metals, usually about 2 GAPM each of Cu and Zn, in isolated, substantially pure or pure form, some of which metalloproteins, in various states of purity, have been named erythrocuprein, hepatocuprien, cerebrocuprien, cytocuprein and superoxide dismutase, are useful in the treatment of inflammatory, shock and toxic conditions.

United States Patent 11 1 Huber et al. 7 1

, 4-51 Sept. 11,1973

[ PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING ORGOTEIN AND THEIR USE [75] Inventors: Wolfgang Huber, San Francisco;

Thomas L. Schulte, Woodside, both of Calif. [73] Assignee: Diagnostics Data, Inc.', Mountain View, Calif. I [22] Filed: Mar. 23, 1972 [21] Appl. No.: 237,507

Related US. Application Data [63] Continuation-impart of Ser. No. 3,538, Jan. 16, 1970, A

abandoned, and a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 15,886, March 2, 1970, and a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 576,454, Aug. 31, 1966, abandoned, and a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 494,048, Oct. 8, 1965, abandoned.

[52] U.S. Cl. 424/177, 260/112 B, 260/112 R, 7 260/113, 260/115 [51] Int. Cl A6lk 27/00, C07g 7/04 [58] Field of Search 260/111 R, 113, 115; 424/177 [56] References Cited FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS 1,160,151 7/1969 Great Britain OTHER PUBLICATIONS J. Biol. Chem. 234, 49 (1959) Markowitz et a1.

' J. Biol. Chem. 234, 46 (1959), Krimmel et a1.

Biochem. Biophys-Acta, 45, 387 (1960) Wyman Arch. Biochem. Bioph. 105, 319 (1964) Porter et al,.

Primgry fixaminerlloward Schain .ArTim 1 William Millen and John L. White 57 i ABSTRACT Pharmaceutical compositions comprising, in a pharma- 9 Claims, No Drawings PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING ORGOTEIN AND THEIR USE SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION pact native conformation which, although heat labile, is stable to heating for several minutes at 65 C. when dissolved in a buffer solution containing a salt ofa divalent metal having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A. and

5 which on gel electrophoresis gives a characteristic mul- According to this invention, there is provided novel pharmaceutical compositions comprising, in a pharma-' ceutically acceptable carrier, an effective unit dosage amount of orgotein. In a preferred embodiment, the novel compositions are adapted for parenteral administration, preferably intramuscular. In a method of use aspect, these novel compositions are employed in the treatment of inflammatory conditions by the administration of an anti-inflammatory effective amount thereof.

DETAILED DISCUSSION The tangible embodiments of this invention are pharmaceutical compositions comprising orgotein.

Orgotein is the non-proprietary name assigned by the United States Adopted Name Council to members of a family of water-soluble protein congeners in substantially pure, injectable form, i.e., substantially free from other proteins which are admixed or associated therewith in the sources thereof. In lyophilized form these proteins are greenish-white powders soluble in water, saline, and buffer solutions and injectable without manifesting toxicity or the immunologic reactions typical of foreign-body proteins. Their elemental, infrared, ultraviolet, spectrographic, optical rotary dispersion and other analyses are consistent with their metalloprotein chelate structure. The novel pharmaceutical compositions of this invention are useful for ameliorating and mitigating in humans and other mammals as well as. in other animals the adverse effects of inflammatory conditions, of stress conditions, including shock and toxemia, and of certain viral "diseases as evidenced by pharmacological and clinical evaluation. See J .A.M.A., May 26, 1969, Volume 208, No. 8; Huber et al., Abstracts Seventh Annual Meeting of the Society of Toxicology, Washington, D.C., March 1968; Carson et al., Federation Proceedings, 29, 420 [978] (1970).

ORGOTEIN The metalloproteins of the compositions of this invention are members of a family of protein congeners having a characteristic combination of physical, chemical, biological and pharmacodynamic properties. Each of these congeners is characterized physically by being the isolated, substantially pure form of a globular, buffer and water-soluble protein having a highly com- 115155553 pattern. Chemically, each is characterized .by containing all but 0-2 of the protein aminoacids, a small percentage of carbohydrate,'no lipids, 0.1 to 1.0

percent metal content provided by one to 5 gram atoms per mole of one or more chelated divalent metals having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A., and substantially no chelated monovalent metals or those that are cell poisons in the molecule. Pharmacodynamically, each of the congeners is characterized by being a non-toxic, only weakly immunogenic injectable protein whose pharmacodynamic properties include antiinflammatory activity. Immunological relatedness of an orgotein congener is sufficient to enable its antibodies prepared in the rabbit or other suitable animal to recognize as an antigen one or more other orgotein congeners and/or for one or more of the antibodies to other orgotein congeners to recognize it as an antigen, as evidenced, for instance, in gel immunoelectrophoresis and/or gel immuno-diffusion. Although some of the physical and chemical properties and the type and degree of pharmacodynamic efficacy of orgotein vary from congener to congener, all orgotein congeners possess the above combination of properties.

oigi'ifisiaiiii soluble 50 mg/ml) in water and common aqueous buffers, pH 1-13. Orgoteins metal ion content and composition are related to its pharmacodynamic activity. Bivalent cations with ionic radii of 0.6 1.0 A. are the most effective. Combinations of Cu, Mg, Zn and/or Co at a total content of 2 -5 gram atoms per mole produces the highest level of physiological activity. The relative amounts of each of the three metals can vary broadly within this total. Most samples also contain trace amounts of Ca, Fe, and Si as the only other metals detectable by emission spec troscopy. All metals can be removed by prolonged dialysis against 10" M EDTA or 10? M orthophenanthroline below pH 4. The metal ions appear to play a decisive role in maintaining the molecular conformation essential for stability and biological activity, acting as locking pins by producing intra-molecular cross links. Differences in affinity for buffer anions may explain why, at identical pH and strength, orgotein behaves differently in certain buffers (phosphate, borate) than in others (Tris, maleate, EDTA).

The aminoacid composition of the orgotein congeners is remarkably consistent irrespective of the source I from which it is isolated according to the process of this invention. The close-relatedness of orgotein congeners 'is apparent from the surprisingly small variances in the aminoacid analyses for a protein isolated from such di 'verse sources as beef liver and chicken red blood cells,

as shown in Table 1 below, which lists the'aminoacid' composition of several orgotein congeners. All of the congeners shown in Table 1 contained all of the protein :aminoacids or all except tryptophan and/or tyrosine.

Chicken Human {Mole percent] Red blood cells (RBC) Pork Dog Rabbit Guinea Pig TABLE I.-AMIVNO ACID COMPOSITION OF ORGOTEIN CONGENERS Liver,

Beef Beef Sheep Horse Aminoaeids 364137487506168 74 lanaaueaaetaaaenea 96 9280 897163 3 eaeLamaaaaeLaaeeeom 1988 866265245 3 9 9956- 74506703n MM0M4 A1anine TABLE II.-AMINO ACID COMPOSITION OF SEVERAL ORGOTEIN CONGENIEIESM Guinea Pig Chicken Human Range [Residues per mole, M.W.=32,500]

Red blood cells (BB 0) Pork Dog Rabbit l ne alter pcriormie acid oxidation. 3 Determined by colorimetric method according to Gaitonde, M. K. and Dovey, T., Biochem J 117, 907 (1970).

Total 1 Determined as eysteic acid after periormic acid oxidation. I Determined as methionine sulio Liver,

Beef Beef Sheep Horse Aminoaeids 1 358120 a amwmnmmz lll 3 76913938 11 H M %M1112 112MM3 0 8000 24 w m mmmmmz 122 3 010 2904 6 9 B M 352MH 111 m2 IN CONGENERS [Cu-Zn chelates] Bovine Horse Sheeg Rabbit Chicken Liver BBC BBC RB BBC BBC I 5.08 5.10 6.85 5.7 4.6 4.9 figlyelnehnllor pH 8.5.. 2.3 2.3 1.9 1.9 2.8

1 Colorimetric determination.

TABLE IIaQPHYSIO-oIiEMICAL CONSTANTS OF ORGOTE Total Average of amino acid analysis and spectrophotometric determination.

uflms...

a NN Nil 0 50 532l4l3 MNOOO QU S Lo 2 0 o o 4832 51 0 M2OOOM W zozaode l Modified orcinol procedure, expressed as percent glucose. 1 Emission spectroscopy. 3 As percent of reference control standard, bovine liver orgotein.

As can be seen in Table l, the orgotein congeners are very similar in aminoacid composition. Their similarity can further be shown by calculating the aminoacid Difference Index (D.l.) of the various congeners, which index gives an indication of the degree of structural relationship between any pair of proteins. To determine the DJ. of one protein relative to another, the absolute difference in the aminoacid content for each of the.

red blood cells, compared with orgotein isolated from beef liver, is less than 9 and usually less than 8. The

very low D1. of each of the pairs confirms their extremely close structural similarity. v

Orgotein is formed of all but -2 of the protein amino-acids. Any missing aminoacids are usually tryptophan and/or tyrosine. The aminoacid residue content does not vary greatly from congener to congener. With most congeners a substantial variation (more than 6 residues) in the number of residues of any aminoacid occurs in no more than 2 of the aminoacids.

The apparent molecular weight of beef liverorgotein as determined by gel filtration using Sephadex G-200 is about 33,000 i 3 percent. Orgotein isolated from beef red blood cells .(RBC) was found to have an apparent molecular weight of about 33,500, .a variation well within the limit of error of theiri ethodTBy gel filtratidfi,

limits of error for this method. Molecular weights calculated directly by aminoacid analysis indicate most congeners are quite close to beef liver orgotein in molecular weights.

Original molecular weight determinations established I the molcular weight of beef liver orgotein at about 32,500. Subsequent studies indicated higher and lower figures but exhaustive studies using sedimentation equi-' librium analysis have now established that beef liver orgotein indeed has a molecular weight of about 32,500

( i 3 percent). Molecular weights based on the average of the values obtained by osmometry, sucrose density gradient, sedimentation equilibrium, amino-acid profile and gel filtration on a Sephadex G-200 (Pharmacia lnc.) column 90 X 2.5 cm, eluted with saline and phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) using ribonuclease, chymotrypsin, bovine serum, albumin and gamma globulin as standards also are about 32,500. Based on this molecular weight and about a 0.4 percent ash content, the best values for orgotein are a total of about 310-320 aminoacid residues and about 2-5 gram atoms of metnls per molecule.

In the ultra-centrifuge, orgotein in normal saline moves as a uniform, sharp band, with a sedimentation coefficient (beef, horse, human) of about 2.7 i 0.1 Svedberg Units.

Beef liver orgotein has an isoelectric point at pH 5.10 i 0.05, and an isoionic point at 5.35 i 0.1. The isoelectric point of other orgotein congeners varies somewhat,

e.g., from about 4.6 to 5.9. The isoelectric point was I determined by isoelectric focus'sing'or by gel electrophoresis at different pl-Is. The isoionic point was determined according to J. Riddiford et a1.', Biochem. 239, 1,079 (1964). The protein was thoroughly dialyzed to free it completely from all electrolytes and then lyophilized. 25.8 mg. of the lyophilized product were dissolved in '5 ml. deionized water, placed in a cell maintained at C. under a nitrogen atmosphere and allowed to come to a stable pH (about to minutes).

The presence of carbohydrate in the protein product was first detected by disc gel electrophoresis, using the Schiff test (W.F. McGuckin and BF. McKenzie, Clin. Chem. 4, No. 6, Dec. 1965) on acrylamideand cellu-.

, lose acetate electropherograms of orgotein. Tests with typical sugar reagents after prior acid hydrolysis, indicate the presence in beef liver orgotein of about 0.5 1 percent carbohydrate, expressed as commonly is done, in terms of glucose. The carbohydrate appears to be covalently bonded to the protein. The carbohydrate, however, is probably a pentose,- methylpentose and/or glucuronic acid rather than a hexose as evidenced by known colorimetric reactions (Z..-Dische, Methods in Carbohydrate Chemistry, 1, 486, Academic Press, N.Y. (1962) Heptoses, Z-deoxypentbses, hexosamines and sialic acid also could not be detected. A typical elemental analysis of beef liver orgotein is C, 46.82;

1-1, 6.41; N, 16.13; S, 1.10; P, nil; Ash, 1 percent.

Gas chromatography and-electrophoresis tests establish that orgotein is not a lipoprotein. It containsle'ss than 0.01 percent lipid phosphorous, less than 0.'1percent cholesterol, less than 0.05 percent galactolipid and no detectable water-soluble glycolipids. V

The orgotein congeners analyzed to date have numerous titrable e-amino groups but few titrable -'SH and -OH (tyrosyl) groups. For example, beef liver orgotein and beef RBC orgotein contain one titrable OH (tyrosyl) group (N-acetylimidazole titration), onetitrable-SH (p-mercuribenzoate)'and 15- 16 (beef liver) and 16-17 (beef RBC) e-amino' groups (trinitrobenzenesulfonicacid titration). j

'Orgotein'has at pH 7 an infrared spectrum curve typical of proteins.

Beef liver orgotein has a corrected A (pH 7.0 buffer) of 0.23 $0.02 (1 mg/ml). 1n S.N. 576,454, the A ultraviolet absorbance of substantially pure beef liver orgotein was reported as 0.585 (1 mg/ml)l This high absorbance was attributed to the tyrosine and tryptophan content of orgotein. Subsequent analytical studies have established that beef liver orgotein has only 2 tyrosine and no tryptophan per molecule, which are too few to account for this high absorbance at Am.

in the U.V. range.

In US. Pat. No. 3,624,251 and US. Pat. application 1 Ser. 'No. 3,538, filed Jan. 16, 1970, and entitled Orgotein Purification Process, there are described processes for removing traces of a tenacious extraneous protein in the samples of orgotein producedaccording' 50 to the process of US. Pat. Ser. No. 576,454. lt was found that samples of bovine liver orgotein which are free of this extraneous protein have a substantially lower A i.e., 0.3. Thus, the high A absorbance of the orgotein produced according to the process of US. Pat. Ser. No. 576,454 is due to the presence of this tenacious extraneous protein, which is rich in tyrosine and tryptophan residues.

In the visible spectrum, samples of orgotein which contain Cu in the molecule exhibit a broad peak at 655 mu, which peak confirms the presence of chelated copper in the molecule.

In gel-electrophoresis, e.g., on polyacrylamide and argarose, orgotein gives a typical pattern showing multiple closely spaced bands at various pI-Is and a low ionic strength. This multi-band electropherogram pattern is characteristic of orgotein and its congeners but the location of the bands relative to the origin can vary from congener to congener. A typical electrophero- 10 Approximate Approximate Band Width Distance From Relativemm Origin Intensity mm Band l 3.0 2.8 45.1 Band2 3.2 9.5 38.2 Band 2 2.5 15.8 16.6

closest to origin (most cathodic) center of origin through to center of band From recent literature data, it is now apparent that this family of metalloproteins includes the proteins previously isolated in various states of purity and given the names hemocuprein and hepatocuprein, Mann & Keilin, Proc. Royal. Soc. for Biol. Sci., 126, 303 (1939); cerebrocuprein, Porter & Ainsworth, J. Neurochem, l, 260 (1957); erythrocuprein, Markowitz et al., J.

Biol. Chem., 234, 40 (1959); and cytocuprein, Carrico & Deutsch, J.Biol.Chem., 244, 6,087 (1969). For other references, see Mohamed & Greenberg, J.Gen. Physiol. 37, 433 (1954); Porter & Folch, Arch. Neurol. Psychiat. 77, 8 (1957); Porter & Ainsworth, J. Neurochem., 5, 91 1959 Krimmel et al., J.Biol. Chem.,

234, 46 (1959); Wyman, Biochem. Biophys. Acta, 45, 387 (1960); Shields et al., J.Clin. 1nv., 40, 2,007 (1961); Markowitz et al., Anal. Chem., 33, 1,594 (1961); Porter et al., Arch. Biochem. Bioph., 105, 319

(1964); Stansell stomach, J.Biol.Chem., 240, 4,299

(1965); ibid, 240, 4,306 (1965); Stansell & Deutsch, Clin.Chem. Acta, 14, 598 (1966); McCord & Fridovich, J.Biol.Chem., 248, 5,753 (1968); I-lartz & Deutsch, J.Biol.Chem., 244, 4,565 (1969); McCord & Fridovich, J.Biol.Chem., 248, 6,056 (1968); Carrico & 5 Deutsch, ibid, 245, 723 (1970). These metallo proteins have been reported to possess very high superoxide dismutase activity. See McCord & Fridovich, J.Biol.- Chem., 244, 6,049 (1969); Keele, McCord and Fridovich, J.Biol.Chem., 245, 6,176 (1970); ibid, 246, 2,875 1971 Orgotein can be isolated from red blood cells accord-v ing tothe method of U.S. Pat. No. 3,579,495. It can be isolated from liver and other tissues of a variety of animals, preferably bovine, according to the process of U.S. Pat. application Ser. No. 15,883, filed Mar. 2, 1970; Netherlands ,Pat..No. 66/l4,l77; Belgium Pat. No.1687,828; and British Pat. No. 1,160,151.

Orgotein's C-terminal group can vary from congener .to congener, which shows that it does not play a vital role in orgoteins pharmacodynamic properties. For example, in beef liver and beef RBC orgotein the C- .8 terminal group is lysine; in horse RBC orgotein, rabbit RBC orgotein and in sheep RBC orgotein, it is proline; in chicken RBC orgotein, it is glycine.

Because the aminoacid profile of orgotein varies slightly from congener to congener, its aminoacid sequence also may well vary from congener to congener. Such changes appear not to altermaterially either the functional or the pharrnacodynamic properties of one orgotein congener when compared to the other members of the family. The determination of the aminoacid sequence, even of a protein of relatively low molecular weight, is a laborious task involving years of research; in addition aminoacid sequence sometimes canvary widely without change of functionality. Thus, to date it 5 has been of little use in the assessment of protein functionality and biological activity. The relatively high molecular weight of the polypeptide chain of orgotein makes identification of a metalloprotein as an orgotein congener by this means impossible for all practical purposes. Of far greater value than aminoacid sequence for identification purposes is the immunological crossreaction and/or the aminoacid Difference Index of the metalloprotein relative to a known zorgotein congener, e.g., beef liver or beef RBC orgotein.

The orgotein molecule in solution is very compact as shown, inter alia, by its pronounced resistance in highly purified state to prolonged heating at-elevated temperatures, by the high values for hard-to-exchange amide hydrogen, and by its optical rotatory dispersion values.

Orgotein is at least partially in the form of a metal chelate, i.e., it contains from 1 to 5, preferably about 4, gram atoms per mole of protein (GAPM) of one or more chelated divalent metals having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A. Preferably, the predominant metal is one having an ionic radius of 0.65 to 0.79 A, i.e., Co, Cu, Fe, Ge, Mg, Ni and Zn, more preferably Cu or Zn. Above 4 GAPM, at least a portion of the metal content of the protein appears not to be in chelated form and is not required for the physiological activity of the protein to be manifested at its maximum. The total metal content of most samples is about 0.1 to 1 percent and in the most active samples, it is between 0.15 and 0.75 percent. The degree of pharmacological activity possessed by orgotein appears to be at least partially dependent upon the presence of one or more physiologically essential divalent metal ions in the chelate. Therefore, preferably at least 65 percent, desirably at least percent, and most preferably percent or more of the metal content of the chelate is provided by a combination of one or more of Ca, Cu, Fe, Mg, Co and Zn in divalent form, more preferably two or more of Cu, Mg, Co and Zn. For a list of ionic radiiof metals, see Hall, Chemistry and Physics, 44th Ed. pages 3,507-8 (1962). In most of such samples, a metal having an ionic radius of 0.65 to.0.79 A, preferably Cu, Mg or Zn is the predominant metal. By predominant metal" ismeant the chelating metal present in highest percentage in the protein chelate. Mostorgotein congeners are isolated containing-about 2 GAPMeach of 0 Cu and Zn.

The monovalent metals, e.g., Na and K, are preferably present in orgotein in at most only trace amounts as part of the metal chelate per se. Orgotein is prepared so that it is virtually free of metals which are cell poisons, e.g., Pb, Cd, Se, etc. The most active chelate samples contain less than 0.01 percent physiologically nonessential metals, e.g., Al, Si, B. The high Si content of 9 some samples. is a tenacious impurity picked-upduring purification, rather than a. chelating metal.

The process of prior filed application Ser. No, 3,538, filed Jan. 16, 1970, can be. employed. to remove silicones from samples of orgotein by passing asolution thereof in buffer, e.g., 01M phosphate, pH 6.0, at a concentration of 5 to mg. orgotein/ml'4through a column of an ion exchange resin having weakly basic or acidic groups, e.g., DEAE-cellulose.

Although most of the metal content of' the most active orgotein samples is provided by physiologically essential divalent. metals, samples of orgotein often con.- tain undesired other metals. These are often acquired in the isolation process, particularly if the total metal content of the protein is relatively low. This can be avoided by maintaining the protein in a buffer containing one or more. physiologically essential'divalent metals of a concentration high enough to retard the acquisition of such extraneous metals and/or. by contacting the protein only with equipment which is free from such metals.

The orgotein employed in the pharmaceutical com positions of this invention is substantially pure, i.e., substantially free from other proteins" with which the orgotein was admixed or' associated in the source thereof. Any extraneous proteins present are innocuous and, for all practical purposes, do not alter" the spectrum of activity or efficacy of the orgotein. The orgotein employed is thus substantially free from immunogenic impuritiesand insoluble, e.g., denatured, proteins. The originalsamples of orgotein employed contained traces of extraneous proteins which could'be detested on gel electrophoresis, most of which move as a broad weak band, moving substantially slower than the three bands characteristic of orgotein. Trace amountsof other impurities which appear as background between the orgotein bands are sometimes present. These slow moving protein impurities can also be present in orgotein isolated from other tissue sources. They are rarely, however, present in orgotein isolated from red blood cells.

As stated above, prior filed U.S. Pat. application Ser. No. 3,538, filed Jan. 16, 1970, discloses a process for the removal of these extraneous proteins. In this pro cess, a solution of 5 to 20 g/liter of orgotein in a buffer, e.g., monosodium phosphate buffer at pH 6 and at 10 to 10 M concentration, is deposited on a column of an ionic exchange-resin having either weakly basic or weakly acidic groups, e.g., DEAE-cellulose; the extraneous proteins are selectively eluted with the same or different buffer at about the same molarity; and the purifled orgotein is then eluted with a buffer or higher. ionic concentration, e.g., .monosodium phosphate buffer at 10' M concentration or the same buffer at 10" to 10' M concentration brought to 10" M ionic strength with other salts, e.g., NaCl. I

In the process of U.S. Pat. No. 3,624,251, theorgotein sample is subjected to a post-purification heat treatment at a higher temperature than was employed in the heating step of the isolation process. This process takes advantage of the greater stability of orgotein when in substantially pure form. The heating is con- Orgotein is substantially non-toxic. Both-acute, and

10 long-term chronic toxicity studies failed to reveal any evidence of tos icityattributable to orgotein.

Orgotein appears to be only weakly immunogenic. Noprecipitating or non-precipitatin g antibodies" in the serav of humans and horses undergoing intermittent clinical treatment with intramuscular injections of bevineorgotein over a period of morethian a year were detected. This isvery useful clinically because the repeated administration of virtually all 'known foreign body proteins can result in antibody production at a much faster rate. l

Although orgotein is a weak immunogen, it canbje made to produce antibodies in sensitive animals, such as rabbit and guinea pig, when introduced therein with strong immunostimulants, such as complete Freunds adjuvant. Rabbits are preferred over guinea pigs because of their greater volume of blood. Even with complete Freund's adjuvant, the production of orgotein antibodies in rabbits requires an extensive immunization regimen, often as longas 2-5 months.

Different immunization schedules were evaluated. In responsive rabbits, the following method produces antibodies reliably. An initial doseof 5-10 mg. orgotein in complete Freunds adjuvant is administered partly into the foot pad and partly into various regions around the neck. This is followed 2' weeks later by 2 mg. of orgotein in saline'in'jected into several areas around the neck. The same procedure is repeated at 4 and, 6 weeks; thereafter 1 mg orgotein in saline is given every other week for atotal of about 2-4 months. Antibody formation is followed by Dean-Webb titration. Once a constant titer has been obtained the animals are bled and the gamma-globulin fraction isolated fromthe serum in purified form by chromatography over DEAE-cellulose, according to H. G, Levy and H. A. Sober, Proc. Soc. Exp, Biol. Med. 103, 250 (1960). This is necessary since the anti-orgotein rabbit sera are generally immunologically quite weak. Standard tech niques of immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis are used for elevation of antigen-antibody interaction. See, e.g., Experimental lmmunochemistry, Kabat and Mayer, CharlesE. Thomas, Springfield, Ill. 1967.

The gamma globulin fraction containing orgotein antibodies can be used to identify various orgotein congeners by their. immunoelectrophoretic patterns. lmmunoelectrophoresis of a highly purified orgotein congener against its rabbit antibody produces a sharp continuous precipitin line arching over each of the multiple bands of'the thin film agarose elec tropherogram of the congener. Thus, a congener of orgotein can be identified as such by the production of a visible precipitin line in immunoelectrophoresis or in gel double diffusion in which that congener is run againstthe rabbit antibody produced by another orgotein congener or when another congener is run against the rabbit antibody produced by that congener. Gel double diffusion is simnoelectrophoretic titration. When the 'o rgotin congener is obtained from a source quite diverse from that use to produce the antibody, e.g., chicken RBC orgotein vs. beef liver orgotein-rabbit antibodies, a much lower antigen/antibody ratiomay be optimal. If the source of the respective congeners are too diverse, e.g., beef liver vs. yeast, the antibodies produced from one of the congeners will be unable to recognize the other congener as an antigen, due to the wide species disparity.

If the metalloprotein believed to be an orgotein congener fails to give a precipitin line on immunoelectrophoresis against orgotein rabbit antibodies, this metalloprotein can be used to produce rabbit antibodies in the manner described above. Immunoelectrophoresis of these antibodies against known orgotein congeners almost invariably will result in a recognition" by the antibodies of one or more of the other orgotein congeners and the production of the characteristic precipitin line.

Thus, although immunological evaluation ofa metalloprotein is an indirect, i.e., confirmatory, basis for determining whether the metalloprotein is an orgotein congener, it is conclusive proof if there is recognition by the antibodies produced by an orgotein congener of the metalloprotein and/or if antibodies produced by the metalloprotein recognize an orgotein congener. Since bovine liver orgotein and bovine RBC orgotein antibodies produce a precipitin line in immunoelectrophoresis against many other orgotein congeners, and since those orgotein congeners not recognized by those rabbit antibodies either are recognized by one or more of the antibodies produced by other orgotein congeners or will produce antibodies which will recognize one or more other antibodies, immunoelectrophoresis and gel double diffusion are important parameters to establish whether an unknown metalloprotein is an orgotein congener. Obviously, if the metalloprotein has the combination of physical, chemical and pharmacodynamic properties common to the orgotein congeners examined thus far, the evidence is incontrovertible. However, without examining a metalloprotein for this combination of properties; immunological evaluation alone will provide strong evidence that the metalloprotein is an orgotein congener if it is recognized as an antigen by orgotein antibodies or its antibodies recognize as an antigen an orgotein congener.

STARTING MATERIALS The orgotein precursor is present in only minute amounts in natural protein fractions. Its presence was not heretofore detected because conventional isolation techniques were incapable of removing the undesired proteins from the starting mixture without at the same time destroying or removing the desired protein.

A wide variety of natural protein sources contain trace amounts of the precursor natural form of the protein. Such sources include animal organs and tissue, e.g., liver, kidney, testes, pancreas, placenta, intestinal mucosa, thymus, lung, spleen and red blood cells of the rabbit, sheep, lamp, mules, horses, chickens, rats, mon keys, goat, guinea pig, dog, cat, swine, cows, steers, calves, humans, marine organisms, e.g., whale, dolphin, sea lion, shark, swordfish, mussels, lobsters and oysters, vegetable sources rich in protein, e.g., seeds, wheat germ, whole rye, soya, kidney, lima and jackbeans, and mushrooms; also micro-organisms, e.g., fungi and bacteria, including yeasts, E. Coli, Streptomyces, penicillium, and Saccharomyces. Preferred sources are animal organs and red blood cells (RBC), Preferably bovine.

The orgotein precursor is often extracted from the natural protein source along with proteins having en+ zyme activity, e.g., arginase and carbonic anhydrase, etc. However, except for superoxide dismutase activity possessed by the Cu chelated congener, whichis as high as any reported in the scientific literature, orgotein itself does not exhibit generalized enzyme activity. Tests in over 30 different enzyme systems, utilizing a broad range of substrates, have failedto reveal any significant activity when the protein was used in lieu of the enzyme in the respectiveassay systems. Included were several each of the oxidoreductases, transferases, hydrolases, proteases, lipases and isomerases. Only in the case of catalase, peroxidase and snake venom phosphodiesterase were traces of activity observed, i.e., less than 2 percent of that of the respective known enzymes run in parallel.

Known techniques for isolating such enzymecontaining fractions can be employed for obtaining a starting protein-fraction containing enriched amounts of the orgotein precursor if the isolation technique employs a freshly harvested source of protein and otherwise meets the requirements for non-destruction of the desired protein. See R.M. Morton in Methods in Enzymology, C0lowick and Kaplan Editors, Vol. I, pp. 25-51, Academic Press, New York (1955).

To determine whether a mixture of soluble proteins contains protein precursors of orgotein, -a divalent metal having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A. is added to a solution of the proteins and enough protein impurities are removed to permit the characteristic multiband pattern typical for the. orgotein protein in gel electrophoresis at low ionic strength to be detected among the other proteins present. Todo so, the mixture of proteins to beassayed for orgotein protein content is dissolved at 05 C. in a buffer at pH between 1 and 13, e.g., 4-10, preferably about 7.5, which contains dissolved therein a salt of one or more divalent metals. Any buffer-insoluble proteins are removed, e.g., by filtration or centrifugation. The buffer-soluble proteins are then precipitated therefrom with a water-miscible solvent, e.g., acetone. The buffer soluble portion of the precipitated proteins will reveal on gel electrophoresis on polyacrylamide or agarose at low ionic strength, within its overall pattern the narrow, closely spaced multi'band pattern typical of orgotein. The details for running such electropherograms have been described above.

Thin film argarose electropherograms are particularly useful to follow the enrichment of the orgotein.

protein in the protein mixture. Sample concentrations of 1.0- mg/ml, run in 0.17 M tris-glycine buffer at pH 8.45, 5 mA and 200-300 V for 30 minutes have proved useful for this purpose. An advantage over disc gel electrophoresis as an analytical tool is their ability to visualize both cathodically and anodically moving proteins as a result of the sample well being near the center of the plate.

oRGorstN IMSOLATION PROCEDURE The process of this invention is characterized by the isolation of orgotein from a mixture of proteins comprising the orgotein protein, by a multiplicity of fractionation steps employing an aqueous solution at a pH of l to 13, preferably 4-10, containing dissolved therein a salt-of a divalent metal having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A. This characterizing feature is based upon the discovery that orgotein is more stable at pH 4-10 and most stable atabout pH 7.5 and is much more stable in the presence of such a salt.

As stated above, the orgotein protein is sensitive to pH. Denaturation occurs at pH below 1.0 and above 13. Therefore, solutions of the protein should be maintained at a pH from 4-l0 to avoid reduced yields by partial denaturation. The degree of solubility or insolubility under any given set of conditions is also dependent on the degree of purity and the concentration of the desired protein.

Preferably the pH of the solution containingthe divalent metal ions is non-acidic, e.g., pH 7.0 to 8.5. When the fractionation step involves precipitation of less soluble proteins while retaining the orgotein in solution, the pH is preferably about 8.5. When the orgotein protein is precipitated, the pH is preferably about 4 7.5, e.g., about 5.0.

Buffers which can be used include any conventional buffered aqueous solvent solution for proteins which provide the requisite pH, e.g., NH H,PO, (N HJ HPO tris(hydroxymethyl)-aminomethane, maleic acid-NaOH, citric acid-sodium citrate, acetic acidsodium acetate, citric acid-('NH ),HPO4, succinic acid- NaOH, sodium acid maleate-NaOH, sodium cacodylate-HCl, boric acid-borax, etc. See G. Gomori, Methods in Enzymology, Vol. I, pages 138446 (1955), es-

pecially buffers No. 5-8 and 10-18. Water adjusted to weakly alkaline pH and containing sufficient divalent metal ion can also be used. 7

As stated above, the desired protein is much more stable, particularly to heat, as a chelate of a divalent metal (Me having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A. it rapidly loses its stabilized compact configuration in the absence of adequate amounts of such chelating metals. Therefore, at least the heat purification step described herein and preferably several or all other isolation steps are conducted employing an aqueous solution containing a salt having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A, preferably 0.65 to 0.80 A, more preferably 0.65 to 0.79 A, e.g., Mg(Ac) MgSO MgCl,, CaCl MnSO etc., in at least 1 X 10" M concentration, preferably 0.005 to 0.20 M, e.g., about 0.020 M, when the metal is Mg or Mn. The concentration which should be used is dependent upon the divalent metal used. Magnesium, manganese, calcium and cobalt keep the protein in solution above about 0.2 Mor below about 0.02 M concentration of the metal. Zinc and copper bring about precipitation at 0.2 M. Therefore, these should be used at lower concentration than the other metals, e.g., about 5 X 10 M for copper and 5 X 10" M for ZInC.

In the application of W. Huber, U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 150,809, filed June 7, 197] as a continuation-in-part of U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 657,866, filed Aug. 2, 1967, now abandoned, there is disclosed an improvement in this process in which the final extraneous protein impurities are removed from the orgotein protein in a buffer solution containing as the sole divalent metal ions, a mixture of Mg, Cu and Z ions, in concentrations of 10 M, 10 M and 10" M, respectively.

In the process of this invention, which involves the at least partial purification and preferably isolation of the protein while it is in the form of a metal chelate with one or more divalent metals having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A., the predominant metal preferably is one having an ionic radius of 0.65 to 0.79 A. [f the chelate is desired whose predominant metal is one having a lower or higher ionic radius, e.g., manganese or calcium (ionic radius 0.80 A. and 0.99 A, respectively), it can be produced by transchelating a chelate whose predominant metal is one having an ionic radius of 0.65 to 0.79 A. or chelation of the apoprotein.

Transchelation techniques known in the art can be used, if appropriately modified to take into consideration the properties of orgotein, e.g., by dissolving the chelated protein in a buffer solution containing a water soluble salt of a divalent metal having an ionic radius of 0.65 to 0.79 A, with the ratio of metal ion to protein being such as to retain the protein in the selected buffer solution as a metal chelate of such metal. The choice of conditions is limited by the labile character of the protein in the absence of chelating metals and at pH below 1 or above ll. 1

In addition to certain pH, the orgotein protein is sen sitive to heat, the degree ofsensitivity'depending in part upon its degree of purity and concentration. When very impure, e.g., in the form of a lyophilized mixture of all the soluble proteins from a natural souce, the orgotein is reasonably stable. The pure orgotein protein, in its metal chelated form of this invention, is also stable, so that less care is required in handling and storing pure orgotein than substantially pure orgotein.

A typical isolation technique employed to obtain the isolated substantially pure protein metal chelate of this invention first removes insoluble materials, using an aqueoussolution as a selective solvent forthe soluble proteins containing the desired protein. Then materials more soluble than the desired protein are removed em,- ploying one or more'organic solvent and/or salt precipi tation steps in which a fraction of the proteins containing the desired protein is precipitated and the more soluble material is retained in the supernatant. Thereafter, undesired thermolabilesoluble proteins are insolubilized by a brief heating step which selectively denatures such proteins. Preparative electrophoresis, preferably gel electrophoresis, or gel filtration can be used to remove residual undesirable, soluble proteins such as, for instance, albumin, thereby providing an injectable protein product free of impurity-induced side reactions.

7 Tifiditiriii proteins comprising the desired protein from natural sources, any gross particles of nonproteinaceous and fibrous insoluble proteinaceous material from a freshly harvested source of protein can be removed in a conventional manner. As soon as possible, the freshly harvested material should be chilled and kept chilled exceptas indicated herein. A temperature below 10 C. is desirable, preferably below 5 C., e.g., as close as practicable to the freezing point of the aqueous solutions used in the isolation steps.

The first step in isolating the desired protein from a protein mixture preferably is the removal of insoluble proteins fro the mixture. This can be achieved by intimately mixing the finely divided protein mixture with an aqueous solution, preferably a buffer solution, of a pH of 4-12, preferably about neutrality.

After separating the insoluble proteins from the buffer solution of the soluble proteins, e.g., by filtration or centrifugation, separation of the undesired soluble proteins and any remaining non-proteins can be accomplished at least in part, by selective precipitation. Much of the undesired highly soluble and less soluble proteins can be removed from the protein mixture by step-wise selective precipitation of the proteins in the mixture from a buffer solution thereof, using organic or inorganic materials soluble in or miscible with, the buffer solution. For example, lipids, nucleic acids, nucleotides and other extraneous materials can be separated by adding sufficient cold acetone or other water miscible organic solvent to the buffer solution of the soluble proteins. Lipids and other acetone soluble impurities remain in solution. Most or all of the proteins, including the orgotein protein, are precipitated. On extraction of the precipitate with appropriate buffer, the orgotein protein is dissolved while many of the other undesired materials remain insoluble.

Any pigmentaceous material in the buffer solution ought also be removed. This can be accomplished by adding a water-soluble amine, preferably heterocyclic, e.g., pyridine, piperidine, or other water-miscible organic solvent or solvent mixture in which the pigmentaceous material is insoluble, to a solution of the proteins in a buffer solution, e.g., before the precipitation of proteins less soluble than the orgotein protein. Re-

moval of the undesired less soluble proteins can follow,

if desired, the separation of the precipitated pigmentaceous materials, by adding an inorganic salt or sufficient additional organic solvent to selectively precipitate some proteinaceous material, leaving the desired protein and the more soluble, undesired proteins and any other extraneous very soluble material in the supernatant. For example, the pigment-free buffer solution of the soluble proteins initially can be brought to 40-55 percent of saturation with ammonium sulfate or other organic or inorganic salt or by use of organic solvent at a concentration which reduces the solubility of the protein mixture in the buffer, thereby selectively precipitating much of the undesired less soluble protein, which can be discarded. Organic materials which can be used to selectively precipitate undesired proteins include water miscible polar solvents, e.g., lower aliphatic alcohols, such as ethanol and isopropyl alcohol, and acetone, dioxane and tetrahydrofuran. For example, a mixture of chloroform and ethanol can be used to precipitate the pigmentaceous material and then, after removing that precipitate, more ethanol is added until protein precipitation begins to occur. If desired, the chloroform can first be removed under vacuum. Other organic solvents, e.g., the lower-aliphatic alcohols, acetone, dioxane, tetrahydrofuran, can be used in this step.

The desired protein can be selectively precipitated from the buffer solution, leaving more soluble materials therein, by adding additional salt or solvent thereto in the manner described for the removal of the less soluble proteins.

The selectivity and efficiency of these salt and solvent fractionation precipitations of the desired protein are affected by the pH of the buffer solution, which should be maintained between I and 12, preferably about 4-10, as well as by the ionic strength and the technique of addition.

An important step in the fractionation process of this invention, which employs solutions containing a salt of v a divalent metal having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00

A., is a heating step in which the proteins more heat labile than orgotein are denatured. This step is preferably conducted after buffer insoluble proteins and non- LII proteins, pigmentaceous materialand organic solvent- [water soluble components have been removed. It is important this step takes place with the orgotein pro tein in the form of a divalent metal chelate. Therefore, the heat treatment ought be conducted in a buffer solution of the protein mixture containing from 1 X 10 to 2 X 10 M or more, depending upon the metals used, of the ions of divalent metal having an ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A., preferably 0.65 to 0.80 A.

In the heating step of the process of this invention, a

buffer solution of the mixture of proteins containing,

the orgotein protein is heated at about -75 C. for a period of timefrom a few seconds up to about 45 minutes, depending on the selected temperature.

The time and temperature employed in the heat treatment are inversely proportional. At this point in the purification process, the desired protein is only briefly stable at temperatures above 75 C. Therefore, unless an instantaneous heating and chilling technique like flash pasteurization is employed, the mixture should not be heated above 75C. Heating to tempera-. tures below 50 C. usually is not satisfactory because some of the undesired heat labile proteins are fairly resistant to denaturation at such lower temperatures. At this point in the purification process, .the desired protein is stable at C. for at least 15-30 minutes, at C. for about l0-25 minutes and at C. for about 10-15 minutes, thus permitting the use of conventional heating and cooling techniques. Therefore, heating at about 55 C. for about one hour to about C. for a few minutes, preferably about 60 to 65 C. for about 10 to 20 minutes, is usually employed:

The amount of orgotein lost in the heating step is partially dependent upon the amount of protein impurities which are denatured and the orgotein concentration. However, the heating step can be conducted on a protein mixture in which none, some, or substantially all of the protein impurities have been previously removed by other techniques.

In the final purification any significant remaining amounts of extraneous proteinsare removed to produce the isolated substantially pure orgotein. Because the remaining proteins other than albumin type are less apt to produce undesirable responses upon injection, their virtually complete removal isless critical but nonetheless much preferred. Remaining extraneous proteins can be removed in a variety of ways, e.g. countercurrent extraction, gel filtration, paper or thin layer chromatography, or selective elution from apatite and other inorganic gels or ion exchange columns either singly or in combination. Gel electrophoresis or resin chromatrography using a porous resin which acts as a molecular sieve, e.g., cross-linked dextran, is preferred. Resin chromatrography is most preferred for reasons of production economy and because larger amounts of protein can be processed at one time.

An albumin removal step is essential, when the protein source contains albumin, because the other isolation steps usually employed in a process for producing the desired protein product increase rather than decrease the absolute albumin content of the purified protein. For example, the albumin content of the total soluble protein fraction from bovine liver is 7.5 percent; bovine kidney, 8 percent; from porcine kidney, 10 percent; from bovine spleen, oysters and mussels, 2-3 percent. In the fractionation steps described here- 17 inafter, albumin content of the concentrates rises to 22-31 percent. Gel electrophoresis or resin chromatography is effective in reducing the albumin content of these concentrates to below 1 percent.

Thus, concentration without electrophoresis or resin chromatography of a protein source containing significant amounts of albumin causes a build-up of albumin which precludes its safe use as an injectable pharmaceutical agent and prevents it from manifesting useful pharmacological activity. Free-falling curtain electrophoresis is capable of removing much of this albumin. Gel electrophoresis and resin chromatography remove even more. An albumin removal step is not, of course, required when albumin-free starting material, such as red blood cells from many species, is used.

A commercially available electrophoresis unit which can be used for free-falling curtain electrophoresis is the Brinkmann Model FF. The separating chamber in one such unit for instance is 50 centimeters square and 0.5 to 1 mm. in depth. The temperature is maintained as close to 5 C. as possible. The unit permits the collection of up to 48 fractions. In operation, the protein, dissolved in trismaleate-Me buffer, pH 7.6,is applied continuously. Currents of about 1,000 volts and l20 ma are used. With properly pre-purified protein mixtures, the desired protein chelate will be found in fractions lO-26 which are pooled, dialyzed and lyophilized. The construction and the operating characteristics of this unit limit its capacity to about 500 mg. runs. The isolated protein is obtained in batches of about 100 mgs which are subsequently pooled. Using this method, albumin levels can be lowered to about -10 percent. However, levels below 5 percent are not ordinarily achieved.

A more effective purification technique is the gel or zone electrophoretic purification described herein which uses a gel supporting medium, e.g., polyacrylamide, agarose, starch, etc. Substantially complete. removal of albumin and other extraneous proteins can be achieved by this technique, by virtue of their different speeds of migration.

The preferred preparative gel electrophoresis media is polyacrylamide (5 to percent). Cellulose, crosslinked dextran (Sephadex, Pharmacia, Upsala, Sweden) and starch modifications (ethanolized, etc.), agar, sucrose-agar and other agar modifications are satisfactory but have the disadvantage of their gels being more fragile. For a description of the principles of gel or zone electrophoresis, see Gel Electrophoresis, J .F. Fredrick, Editor, Annals N.Y. Academy Sci., I21, 305-650 (1964).

A production model developed for disc gel electrophoresis purification has a 5 to 7 percent polyacrylamide block 32 centimeters long, 10 centimeters wide and one centimeter deep held between jacketed top and bottom plates made from clear plastic. The dimensions of the block are such that cooling is very efficient and the small depth assures rapid temperature equilibrium between center and surfaces. Cooling is provided by a refrigerated circulating system employing ethylene glycol-water. Operation is carried out at 600-],000 volts and 200-500 ma. These currents together with the very efficient cooling make it possible to handle l-5 g. quantities of starting protein during a developing process of 2-10 hours. The material is applied to a starting trough as a highly concentrated solution in trismaleate-Me or similar buffer at pH 7.4. At appropriate times of development, buffer is passed through the gel at right angles to the direction of electrophoretic flow to elute the protein. Location of protein bands, completeness of elution and protein concentration in eluted fractions are determined by spectroscopy at 280 mg, or by staining of indicator sections.

In gel electrophoresis, beef liver orgotein is found between slow-moving, gamma globulin protein type fractions and the fastmoving, albumin-type protein frac' tions.

Another preferred means for removing albumin and other types of extraneous proteins remaining after the previously described fractionation steps is by chromatography, e.g., using as chromatographing media porous resins which filter proteins according to molecular volume, i.e., act as molecular sieves. One such resin in Sephadex (Pharmacia, Upsala, Sweden) a cross-linked dextran resin of defined pore size. The partially purified protein in a buffer-Me solution, is deposited in highly concentrated form on a column of the resin and then eluted in the manner conventional for chromatographic columns, but using a buffer solution containing a divalent metal of ionic radius of 0.60 to 1.00 A, preferably 0.65 to 0.79 A, e.g., magnesium, or a mixture of two or more of magnesium, copper and zinc, as eluting solvent. Ionic strength variations often facilitate separation and subsequent elution.

In the application of W. Huber, U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 815,175, filed Apr. 10, 1969, abandoned in favor of U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 3 1,791, filed Apr. 24, 1970, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,5 79,495, there is disclosed a process for isolating orgotein from red blood cells. According to that process, the red blood cells are separated from the plasma of the blood by centrifuging. Repeated washing of the separated cells with isotonic solvents and recentrifuging removes residual plasma and with it the plasma albumin, adhering to the compacted cells. The plasma-free red cells are then ruptured by hemolysis, using conventional procedures. See M. Moskowitz and M. Calvin, Exp. Cell Res, 3, 33 (I952); 85. Berstein et al., J.Biol.Chem., 122, 507 (1938). Hemolysis with deionized water and sonification at 0-5 C. is preferred.

.The hemoglobin and stroma are separated from the lysed mixture by methods known in the art. See E. R. Waygood, Methods in Enzymology, Vol. 2, 836 (1955), Academic Press. Preferably, for hemoglobin this is accomplished by adding a halogenated aliphatic solvent which apparently forms an insoluble complex with the hemoglobin, along with a water-miscible organic solvent to bring a small proportion of the immiscible solvent into the aqueous phase. Hemoglobin complex and stroma then can be removed by centrifugation.

The supernatant, now substantially free of hemoglobin and stroma, is then freed of carbonic anhydrase and other enzymes by heating the supernatant in the manner described in U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 815,175 and Example 4 herein, until the carbonic anhydrase has been inactivated by heating, i.e., l0-30 minutes at 6070 C. Thereafter the mixture is immediately cooled to well below room temperature. The precipitated proteins are removed by filtration or centrifugation. The supernatant remaining after removal of the precipitated proteins contains the orgotein protein as the, or one of the, predominant proteins. After removal of the precipitate formed in the heating step, the orgotein protein in the 19 resulting solution, ofisolated therefrom by dialysis and lyophilization, can be purified and isolated by mixed bed resin filtration, electrophoresis and/or gel filtration through a polymer which acts as a molecular sieve, as described herein.

For literature methods for isolating orgotein, see the references cited above. These products, after processing as described above to provide sterility, nonpyrogenicity and stability, can be employed in the com positions of this invention.

PHARMACODYNAMIC PROPERTIES OF ORGOTEIN Pharmacological and clinical data have established orgotein is useful in the treatment of a variety of ailments and diseases in animals, particularly those which result in inflammatory and related stress conditions manifesting themselves in the afflicted animal. This utility has shown no specificity as to any particular species of mammal to date. The action of the orgotein is fast and effective. For example, orgotein in man and horses is useful in relieving the pain, tenderness and disfunction following acute traumatic injuries and in the treatment of orthopedic disfunction, e.g., bony exostosis. It is effective in combating the effects and sequelae of shock and toxic conditions. Orgotein also is effective in certain viral diseases, e.g., human influenza A and B, viral horse pneumorhinitis, canine distemper, picorna virus induced feline pneumotracheitis, and disfunctions based on the family of herpes virus. The animal toxicology of orgotein has been extensively studied and found to be largely uneventful, demonstrating its lack of toxicity. Orgotein has been studied extensively in various animal models of induced inflammation, viz., foot paw edema in the rat produced by carrageenin, or yeast, or silver nitrate; adjuvant-induced polyarthritis in the rat; passive cutaneous Arthus reaction; cotton pellet granuloma in the non-adrenalectonized and bilaterally adrenalectonized rat; pox-virus-induced skin edema in the rabbit; PVA sponge implant-inducedinflammation and wound healing and antiserum-induced skin edema and active anaphylaxis in the guinea pig and the mouse. Potent beneficial effects of orgotein were observed in all these models. For biological standardization and quality control the assay based on antiserum-induced skin edema has been used.

In guinea pigs, using this antiserum-induced inflammation according to the method of Ungar et al., Arch. Int. Pharmacodynam. 123, 71 (1959), a highly purified sample of the protein has an inflammatory inhibiting activity of about 50 percent at a level of 1.0 mg/kg, which is the same order of activity as produced by about 60 mg/kg of butazolidine and about 20 mg/kg of prednisolone. Thus, by this test, orgotein has higher potency than two of the standard non-steroidal and steroidal anti-inflammatory agents.

Orgotein is effective in treating a wide variety of inflammatory conditions, including those in which synthetic anti-inflammatory agents have limited utility, e.g., because of toxic side effects upon prolonged use.

More specifically, orgotein is efficacious in ameliorating inflammatory conditions and mitigating the effects thereof, for instance those involving the urinary tract and the joints, in various mammals. It is useful in alleviating the symptoms of and the structural deformities associated with posttraumatic arthritis, and theumatoid diseases, such as bursitis, tendonitis, osteoarthritis, non-surgical disc syndrome known as ossifying passhymeningitis in dogs (spondylitis) and myositis. Diseases of the genito-urinary tract which respond to orgotein treatment include both acute and chronic inflammatory conditions, e.g., epididymitis, urethrotrigonitis, intersititial cystitis, radiation cystitis, urethral stricture, chronic congestive prostatitis and nephritis with impared kidney functiomOrgotein canalleviate uremia and the anemic sequelae, e.g., in cats with cystitis and human patients with uremiaand anemia.

Orgotein also has utility in the treatment of diseases involving an imbalance of the auto-immune system, alone and in combination with drugs conventionally used to treatsuch diseases. Typical are the collagen type diseases, e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, lupus erythematosis and scleroderma, allergic states, e.g., penicillin reaction, which are characterized by multiple wheals, indurations, erythemas, edema or itching,,and drug-induced, e.g., demeclocylin hydrochloride photosensitization.

States of shock can be reversed by orgotein, e.g., those induced by curate-like drugs, overwhelming sepsis, drug toxicity, carbon monoxide, surgical and traumatic shock, anaphylaxis, etc; even though it does not possess significant CNS stimulant activity.

In animal pharmacology, orgotein has been shown to be effective in a number of standard models of induced inflammation, thus predicting the anti-inflammatory effects observed clinically inman andranimals. In the guinea pig skin edema model, when given concomitantly with synthetic anti-inflammatory agents, e.g., prednisolone, dexamethasone and phenylbutazone, orgotein potentiates the suppression of inflammation, thus indicating its use in combination therapy. Since orgotein does not inhibit wound healing and is not immunosuppressive, its substitution for some or all of the anti-inflammatory steroids in anti-inflammatory therapy is especially desirable. v

In addition to its broad-based anti-inflammatory effects, orgotein protects from shock reactions produced upon antigenic challenge after prior sensitization. This inhibition of immediate hypersensitivity was also demonstrated in Arthus reaction. These observations establish a strong rationale for clinical evaluation of orgotein efficacy in various diseases with allergic manifestations, e.g., asthma, particularly since orgotein does not interfere in delayed hypersensitivity reactions, i.e., is not expected to activate disease processes held in check by cellular-immune phenomena.

Orgotein also has been foundto be effective in various in vivo models of virus diseases. In vitro, orgotein was found to be effective against the canine distemper virus, feline picorna virus and human herpes simplex virus. Whether the in vivo antiviral effectof orgotein is 1 on viral proliferation or on inflammatory and/or immu-.

nological sequelae of virus infection hasnot been determined. g

The action mechanism of orgotein appears to involve the sequelae. of immune-related events. Orgotein at 10 M 'or less exhibits a pronounced chemotactic effecton PMNs, both in vitroand in vivo, and in vitro inhibits complement per se aswell as complement fixation in guinea pig, rabbit and human sera. lmmune event-related mechanisms thus may be responsible for the efficacy of orgotein as an antiinflammatory, antishock and anti-viral agent. Membrane stabilization effects of orgotein couldaugment its other effects and contribute to the overall efficacy observed clinically. The action mechanism of orgotein, at least in part, is different from that of both anti-histaminic drugs and corticosteroids.

The safety aspects of orgotein have been exhaustively explored with acute, subacute, and chronic toxicology studies in various animal species, including reproduction and teratology studies. Intravenous, intramuscular, vaginal and intraurethral routes of administration have been used. Sensitization aspects also have been thoroughly explored using intradermal and intraperitoneal sensitization routes with intradermal and intravenous challenge routes. No undesirable effects have been, seen in any of these studies or in any of the clinical studies in animals and man conducted to date. In vivo, the minimal lethal dose in animals was not attained at doses over 2,500 times the anticipated average clinical dose in humans on a weight basis.

Vetrinary clinical studies with orgotein have been conducted in orthopedic disorders in horses, in urethrocystitis in cats and in canine distemper. The horse study demonstrated clear-cut drug efficacy in over 75 percent of the treated animals. In a double-blind, controlled cat cystitis study, interim evaluation of 21 or gotein and 22 placebo cases indicated a pronounced benefit of orgotein administration, statistically significant at the 0.01 level. In a controlled canine distemper study, a preliminary analysis indicated an enhancement of survival probabilities in the orgotein recipients.

Clinical human investigations have shown orgotein to be effective in the treatment of arthritides. Preliminary clinical evidence indicates at least symptomatic relief in progressive systemic sclerosis. Clinical evaluation of orgotein in urological diseases have shown pronounced efficacy in urethro trigonitis, chronic congestive prostatitis, hydrocele, radiation cystitis, interstitial cystitis, and acute epididymitis. Orgotein is also efficacious in the supportive treatment of the side-effects resulting from chemotherapeutic and/or radiation therapy of malignancies. For example, the efficacy of orgotein in normalizing peripheral blood cell counts in cases of inoperable malignancies treated with chemotherapeutic drugs has been demonstrated. Clinical studies have demonstrated that the concurrent administration of orgotein and cytotoxic agents in malignant diseases minimizes or prevents the agranulocytosis which usually results from the chemotherapy. Patients with ovarian carcinoma or malignant melanoma, experienced symptomatic relief i.e., stimulation of appetite and a sense of well-being, while orgotein was administered. Bowel obstruction as a consequence of metastases in ovarian carcinoma cases was relieved by orgotein at doses of to 20 mg daily for several days. Orgotein also promoted the normalization of peripheral blood counts in irradiated rats whose myelograms showed a dose-dependent increase in the rate of recovery of the bone marrow. in laboratory rodents, prophylactic and postudministration of orgotein afforded some protection against the effects of lethal and sub'lethalirradiation, extending survival and a dose-dependent increase of the rate at which bone marrow cell populations return to normal.

Orgotein can be used in conjunction with accepted with steroids in anti-inflammatory therapy, e.g., with cortisone, hydrocortisone, prednisone, predinisolone, and the corresponding A'--9a-fluoro-l6-hydroxy, 16amethyl and IGB-methy] substituted steroids, e.g., dexamethasone, fluorocortisone, fluoromethalone, methylprednisolone, triamcinolone and its acetonide, betamethasone, and their known esters and derivatives, and non-steroids, e.g., acetylsalicylic acid, salicylamide, aminopyrine, chloroquine, hydroxy-chloroquine, phenylbutazone and indomethacin. In so doing, often less than conventional dosages of the synthetic antiinflammatory products are required, which eliminates or minimizes undesired hormonal and other side effects. Orgotein can also be used concurrently or alternatingly with known agents used in antibacterial and in antiviral therapy to increase the effectiveness of conventional dosages of the known agents or, by reducing such dosages of such agents, the toxic and side-effects ordinarily associated with such therapy.

The exact mode of anti-inflammatory action of orgotein is presently unknown. However, in vitro studies suggest that orgotein can block, at least partially, the inflammatory chain of events at the complement stage, the level of chemotaxis, and'the release or activation of lysosomal enzymes and the degranulation of mast cells, RES and other cellular elements. In vivo, these effects prevent or relieve the inflammatory sequelae of pain,

- kinins, cationic proteins, etc., into the site of injury.

caused diseases: respiratory and intestinal influenza (myxo-, adenoand rhino-viruses); canine distemper, human measles, German measles (rubella virus); Herpes zoster; Herpes simplex (varicella viruses); mumps; and warts (verucca viruses). Theantiviral activity of orgotein is believed to be due to the mitigation of responses following the intracellular arrival of the virus. The exact mode of .action and the exact point of attack are at present unknown. Mitigation could occur at the level of viral replication or the host response to the infection. Orgotein does not suppress antibody formation.

In vitro studies have shown that orgotein at low concentrations is capable of interaction with highly polymerized DNA and RNA.-This interaction may be responsible for its antiviral activity by selectively interfering with those phases of viral multiplication that depend upon the intact viral DNA or RNA molecule. On the other hand, the antiviral activity of orgotein could also be due to stimulation of Interferon production. In addition, its anti-inflammatory activity suppresses the inflammatory symptoms of viral and other infection.

Orgotein displays no evidence of chronic or acute toxicity by tests or in use.

Studies conducted include acute parenteral administration to mice, rats, guinea pigs and monkeys at a single dose of 60 mg/kg, which exceedsthe intended clinical dose (0.04 mg/kg) by more than 1,000times; subforms of therapy and medication,.e.g., hormonal, in-

eluding androgen, estrogen and insulin therapy, which often permits the reduction of the hormonal dose.

Orgotein can be used concurrently or alternatingly acute intramuscular administration to guinea pig and monkeys at over times the intended clinical dose; and one-yearchronic tudies in monkeys and rats at two dose levels, both of which were multiples of those intended for therapeutic use. No adverse behavioral, biochemical, physiological or pathological responses were noted in any of these studies. The typical eosinophilia or monocytosis response to an injected offensive foreign-body protein was absent.

Reproduction and teratology studies in rats and rabbits, conducted at five and fifty times the intended clinical dose, caused no observable adverse responses in fertility, gestation viability or lactation in prenatal or postnatal states in the rat; and resulted in no teratologic alterations in rats and rabbits during the critical periods of organo-genesis.

Orgotein is at most only weakly immunogenic. Tests in guinea pigs, using the classic Landsteiner technique with ten intradermal injections spread over 22 days, followed by two weeks of rest and then a challenge injection, revealed no systemic reaction or other indication of sensitization. Attempts at sensitization of guinea pigs by other routes did not yield, on intravenous challenge, the anaphylactic reactions observed with thev other proteins which were tested.

Long term, intermittent use in horses and humans failed to produce demonstrable antibodies and proved that the immunogenic potency of the protein is of very low order, which indicates it is safe for use in mammals over long periods of time. In healthy animals immunological responses are virtually absent, particularly when pure orgotein is employed. There are, however, two events which may occur which should not be confused with an immunological sensitization. The first is a temporary exacerbation which sometimes occurs after the first or second injection. The second is IOcaIso rtYEss in the muscle at the site of injection which may rarely occur, e.g., within 2 to 6 hours after the first or second injection. This response, which ordinarily disappears within 6 to 12 hours, has been observed most frequently in patients who respond well to orgotein therapy.

PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS COMPRISING ORGOTEIN The pharmaceutical compositions of this invention comprise orgotein and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. The form and character which this carrier takes is, of course, dictated by the mode of administration.

The pharmaceutical compositions can,e.g., be in a form suitable for oral use, for example, as tablets, aqueous or oily suspensions, di'spersible powders or granules, emulsions, hard or soft capsules, or syrups or elixirs.

Compositions intended for oral use may be prepared according to any method known in the art for the manufacture of pharmaceutical compositions and such compositions may contain one or more agents selected from the group consisting of sweetening agents, flavoring agents, colouring agents and preserving agents in order to provide a pharmaceutically elegant and palatable preparation. Tablets contain the orgotein ingredient in admixture with nontoxic pharmaceutically acceptable excipients which are suitable for manufacture of tablets. These excipients may be, for example, inert diluents, for example calcium carbonate, sodium carbonate, lactose, calcium phosphate or sodium phosphate; granulating and disintegrating agents, for example maize starch, or alginic acid; binding agents, for ex- The tablets may be uncoated, but preferably are coated by known techniques to delay disintegration and absorption in the gastro-intestinal tract and to protect the orgotein from stomach acids.

Formulations for oral use may also be in the form of hard gelatine capsules wherein the orgotein is mixed with an inert solid diluent, for example calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate or kaolin, or as soft gelatine capsules wherein the active ingredient is mixed with an oil medium, for example arachis oil,liquid paraffin or olive oil.

Aqueous solutions contain the orgotein in admixture with excipients suitable for the manufacture of stable aqueous solutions, e.g., NaCl, to provide a saline or isotonic solution, buffer agents, acids or bases, etc. The aqueous solution can also contain one or more preservatives, for example ethyl or n-propyl phydroxybenzoate.

Oilysuspensions may be formulated by suspending orgotein in an oil suitable for injection, topical or oral oral or parenteral administration. The oily phase may be a vegatable oil, e.g., olive oil or arachis oils, ora

'mineral oil, e.g., liquid paraffin or mixtures of these.

Suitable emulsifying agents are naturally occurring gums, e.g., gum acacia or gum tragacanth, naturally occurring phosphatides, e.g., soya bean lecthecin and esters of partial esters derived from fatty, acids and hexitol anhydrides, for example sorbitan monooleate, and condensation products of the said partial esters with ethylene oxide, for example polyoxy-ethylene sorbitan monooleate.

I The compositions of this invention can also be in the form of an aerosol for inhalation or topical administration slow-dissolving pellets for implantation.

The compositions of this invention can be administrered parenterally, orally and topically. The term par-- enteral as used herein includes subcutaneous, intradermal, intravenous, intramuscular, intraocular, intrastroma, intrasynovial, intrathecal, intramural, intraarticular, intraperitoneal, intrascrotal, intraosseous, intraspincal, intraligamentous and intrasternal. Intramuscular and subcutaneous administration is usually preferred except when the orgoteinis administered proximate a localized area of inflammation.

The pharmaceutical compositions can be in the form of a sterile injectable preparation, for'example, as a sterile injectable aqueous solution. The solution can be formulated according to the known art using those carriers mentioned above. The sterile injectable preparation can also be a sterile injectable solution or suspension in a nontoxic parenternally acceptable diluent or solvent, e.g., 1,3-butanediol.

The compositions of this invention can be in the form of suppositories for vaginal and rectal administration. These compositions can be prepared by mixingorgotein with a suitable nonirritating'excipient which is solid at ordinary temperatures but liquid at the rectal temperature and will therefore melt in the rectum to release the drug. Such materials are cocoa butter and polyethylene glycols.

The compositions of this invention combine an effective unit dosage amount of orgotein, i.e., the orgotein is present at a concentration effective to evoke the desired response when a unit dose of the composition is administered by the route appropriate for the particular pharmaceutical carrier. For example, liquid compositions, both topical and injectable, usually contain about 0.5 to 20 mg. of orgotein per 0.25 to lcc., preferably about 0.5 to cc.,'except I. V. infusion solutions, which can also be more dilute, e.g, 0.5 to 20 mg. orgotein per 50 1,000 ml., preferably 100 500 ml. of infusion solution. Tablets, capsules and suppositores usually contain 0.1 to 25 mg., preferably 1 to mg., per unit.

The weight ratio of orgotein to liquified propellant in an aerosol for topical or inhalation administration can be quite high, e.g., 0.5 5 percent. Topical compositions usually contain orgotein in a concentration of 0.1 to 1 percent in aqueous solution or non-aqueous suspension.

The amount of orgotein administered is dependent on several factors, including the species of patient, the condition of the patient prior to orgotein therapy, the particular disease and its progression and the route of administration. The usual individual parenteral dose range of orgotein is about 0.5 mg. to 20 mg., usually 1 mg. to 5 mg. The dose is not significantly dependent on the weight of the patient. For example, within a dosage regimen in animals, a usual single dose for a cat (0.5 20 lbs.) is about 1 mg.; for a dog (5-50 lbs.) 2 mg; and for a horse (L000 lbs.) 5 mg. Ratherfths; Bfan in dividual dose is more dependent upon the dynamics of the disease pattern. For instance, with a severe infection, e.g., with associated toxemia or uremia, injections spaced about every 6 hours are required, with the frequency subsequently reduced to 8-42 hours and then every 24 hours or longer, depending on the clinical picture. Thus, during the acute state of a disease, the frequency of the injections is often more critical than the amount of each individual close. 1

Larger individual doses are usually administered when orgotein is administered orally, e.g., 5 mg. 25, 50 or 100 mg., or even more. Similarly, when a solution or suspension of orgotein is applied topically to the skin or infused into the bladder, vagina, large intestine, etc., the total amount of orgotein administered in single uninterrupted dosing can vary from 5 to l00 mg. or more. Conversly, when orgotein is administered into the respiratory tract, e.g., in the treatment of asthma, anaphylactic or other acute shock conditions, e.g., as a spray, mist, aerosol, etc., lesser amounts, e.g., 5 to 0.5 mg. or less,are sometimes indicated.

The spacing of the individual doses is also partially determined by the nature of the ailment. in treatment of inflammatory syndromes, orgotein is usually adminstered in multiple successive dosages, spaced as frequently as 6-12 hours apart and as long as six weeks apart. Usually, daily doses are administered until symptomatic relief, e.g., from pair and stiffness, is obtained. Thereafter, doses are spaced further apart, the frequency being adjusted so that recurrence of symptoms is avoided and relief maintained. Treatment can be 55 continued over a period of several weeks or months, and indefinitely for advanced chronic cases.

In treating viral infections, orgotein is usually administered in multiple successive dosages, spaced as frequently as every 6 hours. Usually, doses every 6 to 12 hours are administered until symptomatic relief, e.g., from pain and fever, is obtained from the viral infection. Thereafter, doses spaced 1 to several days apart are administered until all symptoms of viral infection are gone. Treatment'is continued until all symptoms and signs are gone. A subsequent booster shot or two may be given after several days. The number of successively spaced doses of orgotein necessary in order to alleviate at least some of the symptoms associated with the viral infection will vary widely, depending on the nature and status of the infection. In some cases, clinical relief is obtained in a period of a few hours. Others require longer periods of therapy of from several days up to several weeks. Because symptomatic relief sometimes precedes complete elimination of the viral infection, care must be taken not to terminate orgotein therapy prematurely.

Orgotein usually is administered by instillation or bu injection, e.g., intramuscularly, subcutaneously, intravenously or intraderm'ally lflM. is preferred, except in case of shockwhere l.V. is sometimes preferred for more rapid onset of effect, and in certain localized disorders, e.g., radiation and intersititial cystitis, where local injection isoften more effective. Individual doses usually fall within the range of 0.5 to 20 mg. The preferred range for humans is about 0.5 to 4 mg; for horses, about 5.0- 10.0 mg. The exact dosage is not critical and depends on the type and the severity of the disease. 7 q I Oral administration is possible if the protein is protected from the destructive action of the acid pH and enzymes of the stomach,'e.g., in the form of an enteric I coated tablet, although much larger doses are required by this route. The protein has topical activity, e.g., when applied as a solution, aerosol, cream, ointment, salve, etc., which renders it useful'for treating corneal and conjuctival, respiratory, genito-urinary and dermatological disorders. Desirably, it is administered with a surfactant and/or penetrant to ensure better contact and penetration. f

Withoutfurther elaboration, it isbelieved that one skilled in the art can, using the preceding description, utilize the present invention to its fullest extent.' The following preferred specific embodiments are, therefore, to be construed as merely illustrative, and not limitative of the remainder of the disclosure in any way whatsoever.

PREPARATION l tissue, glands and organs, remove fat, connective tissue andblood vessels. Conduct all subsequent steps below 5 C., except as indicated.

'- TO LUENE METHOD l-lomogenize the protein source and immediately add 3 vol, of deionized water or a suitable buffer, 0.05

0.30 M, e.g., maleate, phosphate, tris-rnaleate, barbital, tris-hydroxymethyl-aminomethane, borate, cacodylate, glycine-sodium hydroxide, etc., containing 1 X l to 2 X 10 M of a water soluble salt, e.g., chloride, sulfate, phosphate, acetate, citrate, maleate, borate or phosphate, etc. of a physiologically essential divalent metal, e.g., calcium, cobalt, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese or zinc. Adjust to pH 7.0 7.8. Stir the resulting mixture for several hours. Then add slowly 0.01 vol-equivalent of toluene and continue stirring for several more hours. Let sit until the supernatuant is reasonably clear. Filter, e.g., through cloth, cotton, glass wool or filter-aid, or centrifuge. Exclude direct light in these operations. Immediately freeze the filtrate and lyophilize it. If direct lyophilization proves difficult, dialyze first against 0.001 M buffer containing 0.1 5 X l0 M bivalent metal salt, e.g., Ca, Co, Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, Zn. The resulting powder can be stored in the cold, preferably at below 0 C.

ACETONE POWDER METHOD Suspend finely disintegrated whole tissue in any of the buffer -Me mixtures of (a) above, bring to pH 7.0- 7.8 and cool the dispersion to 0. Add to the dispersion very slowly l0 vols. of acetone at -l0 C. with rapid mechanical stirring. Let settle for about minutes, and decant the supernatant aqueous acetone. Collect the precipitate either by centrifuging or by vacuum filtration through a No. l Whatman paper on a wide Buchner funnel in a cold room at 0. Wash the precipitrogen. Finely grind the powder while cold and store in vacuo at 4. The yield is about 250 g. of powder.

PREPARATION 2 vents pre-cooled to l0 C. All other operations are at.

temperatures below +5 C., except as indicated.

REMOVAL OF BUFFER-INSOLUBLE MATERIAL In the cold and in the absence ofdirect light, stir 100 g. of dry powder, obtained according to Preparation 1,

into one liter of tris-maleate buffer. After several min-- utes add 6.5 g. MgSO 7I-I O in portions and adjust pH to 7.4 with IN sodiumhydroxide. Then add an additional 600ml. of tris-maleate buffer and an additional 6.5 g. MgSOJI-hO. Readjust to pH 7.4. Then add an additional 400 ml. water and continue stirring in cold room until about 6 hours have elapsed from the start of the operation. Let the mixture settle andthen filter or centrifuge. Adjust the filtrate to pH 7.8, hold in the cold until precipitation is complete, centrifuge and filter supernatant. For storage, lyophilize the filtrate .as

tate twice by suspending on each occasion in about 3 5 vol. (calculated from the original volume of dispersion)v of acetone at l0 C. Remove the acetone from the precipitate, first using a stream of nitrogen followed by drying the powder in vacuo over H 80 The last acetone treatment can be followed by washing with dry peroxide-free diethyl ether (at -l5), which greatly facilitates rapid drying. Store the dried material in the cold, preferably in vacuo over a drying agent.

Alternatively,- disintegrate the whole tissue directly in IQ vol. of acetone at l5 in a Waring Blendor (for 3 minutes), and retreat the precipitate with acetone as described above.

If the first acetone precipitate contains much lipid material, washing it with n-butanol at -l5 greatly improves the subsequent extractions.

Alternatively, cut 1 kg. of fresh bovine liver, free from connective tissue, into five or six pieces, rinse with tap water and mince. Homogenize portions of mince (200 g.) in a Waring Blendor with 200 ml. cold iso-osmotic KCI solution for 20 sec. Immediately mix the homogenate in the blender with 200 ml. of acetone at l0 for another 20 sec. Pour the acetone-treated hemogenate with stirring into a 10 liter beaker containing 2.5 liters of acetone at l0. When the final portion of mince has been treated, add to the contents of the beaker cold acetone to a volume of 10 liters and mix. Hold at 4 for a few minutes. Decant the clear supernatant and again mix the contents of the beaker with acetone to 10 liters. Decant the clear supernatant and filter the suspension rapidly on a Buchner funnel covered with a sheet to exclude as much air as possible. Before the cake on the funnel is completely dry, wash with 2 liters of cold acetone.

Continue the filtration until the particles are completely dry. Break up the solid material, spread out on filter paper and air-dry, preferably under a cover of nidescribed in the Preparation.

With some raw materials, e.g., liver, the above step,

and the antecedent Preparation 1 preferably is carried out with 0.1 M manganese sulfate providing .thebivalent metal. Transchelation, i.e., removal of most manganese and replacement by magnesium, is achieved using tris-maleate-magnesium salt buffer in a subsequent step. In some cases, it is desirable tocarry the manganese-tris-maleate buffer through the pigment removal step and sometimes even through the heattreatment step. In still other cases, use of buffer containing other bivalent ions, e.g., Ca, Co, Cu, Fe, Zn,

may be desirable in the initial and/or intermediate steps. About a 50 percent or less yield of powder is obtained, based on the dry weight of the proteins inthe starting natural source. A

PIGMENT REMOVAL This step often is necessary with protein fractions ob tained from dark-colored sources, e.g., liver,- kidney, lung, spleen, jackbeans, certain bacteria, etc. Proteins from other tissues, such as testes, pancreas, placenta with blood clot removed, thymus, heart and other muscle, marine animals and other microorganisms usually do not require this step.

g. of powder from Step A are suspended with stirring in 400 ml. cold 0.1 M tris-rnaleate-Mg buffer at pH 7.2. Let stand in cold room until the precipitate has settled, centrifuge at l2 C. and decant.

If pyridine is used, divide the. decanted liquid into five equal parts. Slowly and with stirring, add to each 8.0 ml. of pre-cooled c.p. pyridine. .Then add 40 ml. of 0.1 M tris-maleate-Mg buffer to each portion. Centrifuge at l2 C., e.g., at 13,000 rpm for 15 minutes. Decant and recombine the supernatants. Discard the precipitate.

29 If chloroform-ethanol is used, to the decanted liquid slowly and with stirring add 15 percent by volume of a precooled mixture of one part chloroform and two parts ethanol. The temperature should remain below 4 C. during the addition. Centrifuge, e.g., at 1214,000

rpm for about minutes, and discard the dark-colored precipitate. The lightly colored, opalescent supernatant is kept cold.

At this point, the partially purified desired protein LESS SOLUBLE MATERIAL REMOVAL The cold tris-maleate-Mg buffer solution from Step A or B at a pH of about 6.0 to 7.5, or its freshly made equivalent from lyophilized powder, is brought to 40-45 percent of saturation with ammonium sulfate, added with stirring in portions either as solid or as saturated aqueous solution. Hold the temperature at 0-5 C. Keep the mixture 10-30 minutes in the cold until precipitation is complete. Centrifuge at 8,000-12,000 rpm and discard the precipitate. Keep the supernatant for several hours in the cold. Centirifuge and discard any further precipitate.

Alternatively, to a 250 ml. portion of the supernatant obtained from Step B or 62 g. of pigment-freeprotein obtained in Step A and dissolved in 250 ml. of 0.1 M trismaleate-Mg buffer at pH 7,5, slowly add with stirring about 0.9'volumes of ethanol or about 0.75 vol umes of acetone pre-cooled to -l0.C., i.e., an amount sufficient to precipitate only a portion of the proteins. The temperature of the mixture should not exceed +2 C. As soon as precipitation is complete, centrifuge in the cold, e.g., at 8,000-l'2,000 rpm, and discard the.

precipitate.

HEAT LABILE PROTEIN REMOVAL Heat the supernatant obtained from Step C in a round-bottom flask or glass lined kettle in a bath kept at 65"-70 C. Stir the solution vigorously until the temperature of the contents reaches about 59 C. and hold for about minutes at or near this temperature. Im-

mediately thereafter immerse the flask into a dry icesolvent or an ice-salt bath and continue stirring vigorat a pH of about 3.5 or about 7.5,addin portions and with stirring pre-cooled (10 C.) acetone or ethanol,

keeping the temperature around 0 C., in an amount sufficient to precipitate at least a portion of the proteins in solution. If, for instance, 0.5 volumes of acetone were used to precipitate less soluble proteins, use about 0.5 to 1.5 additional volumes. Keep the mixture for a'few minutes at about 0 C. until the precipitation is complete. Centrifuge the precipitate at 1 C. or

below (10,00013,000 rpm). Separate and free the precipitate from adhering solvent under vacuum in the cold. Check the supernatant for the extent of precipitation by addition of 0.2 volume of pre-cooled (-l0 C.) acetone or ethanol. lsopropyl alcohol (0.5-2 v/v) can also be used.

Preferably, ammonium sulfate fractionation is used to precipitate the less soluble proteins and solvent fractionation to precipitate the desired protein.

ELECTROPHORESIS Fractionate a solution of the protein precipitated by Step E in 10-15 times its weight of 0.1 M tris-maleate- Mg". buffer (discarding any insoluble material) by gel electrophoresis using polyacrylamide with 'the running gel at pH 8.0 to 9.5 or at pH 3.0 to 4.3.

The following apparatus is used in the gel electrophoresis step:

Electrophoresis Chamber; Buchler Power Supply; Loading Rack; Syringes (disposable plastic 20 cc, Sec,

30 lcc); Syringe Needles 22G X 1% and 25G X 5/8; Teflon Tips for layering tool; Photopolymerizing light (fluorescent light source). The electrophoresis chamber should be thoroughly washed and rinsed in distilled water. The chamberis thenirnrn ersedin a Siliclad(Clay-Adams, New Tbrk) solution (Iv part Siliclad to 50 parts of water) for a fe ously until the temperature has dropped to 25C.

Centrifuge the resulting bulky precipitate in and discard.

MORE SOLUBLE MATERIAL REMOVAL I the cold minutes. lt is then rinsed andoven -dried. v, The electrophoresischamber used is the special production ,model described heretofore.

The reagents used are the following:

Acrylamide monomer (Eastman No. 5,521); N,N-Methylene-bisacrylamide BIS -(Eastman No. 8383); Riboflavin (Eastman No. 5181); N,N,N',N'- Tetramethylethylenediamine-TEMED (Eastman No. 8178); Glycine (Eastman No. 445); TRIS (Trishydroxymethyl-aminomethane) (Fisher T-395); Su-

crose (Baker No. 4,072); Ammonium persulfate Reagent grade;1 N HCI; 1 M H PO,; Acetic Acid; and Methanol (Reagent Grade). Small pore gel, 7 percent, is used.

The stock solutions used are:

(a) 1 N HCI, 480 ml.; TRIS, 363 g.; TEMED, 4.6 m1.; and H, 0 to make 1,000 ml. (b) 1 M H PO 2-56 ml.; TRIS, S7 g.;and 11,0 to make 1,000 ml. (pH 6.9). (c) Acrylamide, 280 g.;BIS, 7.36 g.; and H,O tomake 1,000 ml. (d) Acrylamide, g.; BIS, 25 g.; and H, O to make 1,000 ml. (e) Riboflavin, 40 mg. and H 0 to make 1,000-ml. v v 7 Working solutions used are:

Mixture A: 1 part (a); Z parts (c) andl part (H O).

Mixture B: Ammonium persulfate, 1.00 g.; and H 0, 1,000 ml.

The buffer solution used is:

TRIS, 60 g.; Glycine, 288 g.; H O to 20 liters; p

Tracking Dye used is 0.001 percent Bromphenol Blue. It was found that for the best separations fresh buffer should be used for each run. The buffer can be used for a maximum of three runs with some loss of resolution on the second and third runs. All solutions should be stored in the refrigerator. If they are, they are usable for several months, except Mixture B which should be made fresh weekly.

Equal parts of Mixture A and Mixture B taken directly from the refrigerator are mixed in a filtering flask. The flask is attached to the aspirator and the contents are swirled gently for about a minute in a partial vacuum. The chamber is then filled with the cover on,

to /8 inch from the top using a long thin tube. The thin tube is inserted to the bottom of the chamber and is slowly withdrawn as the slab is filled, keeping the tip beneath the gel surface. The gel is then water layered and placed on top of a drying oven. Gelling is complete in about to 30 minutes.

A water layering tool can be made from a plastic syringe and a 25 G X 5/8 inch needle tipped with a Teflon tip (Analytical Chemists, Inc.). The syringe is filled about 1/3 full with water, tinted blue with tracking dye solution. The Teflon tip is placed just beneath the surface of the gel and moved upwards as the water is expelled onto the gel. The tip should at no time be lifted above the surface of the liquid.

After polymerization, the water is carefully removed. The surface is rinsed once with degassed sucrose gel.

The sample (0.5 5.0 g.) is suspended in water, 0.9 percent saline or in TRIS buffer, mixed with gel and filled into the pre-formed trough of the gel slab. The surface is sucrose layered and sealed with a capping gel. Capping gel is addeduntil a convex miniscus is formed. A plastic cover is then slid across the top so that no air bubbles are trapped. The loaded trough is placed between two fluorescent la riips as close to the lights as possible. Polymerization is complete between 30 minutes and an hour depending on the amount and nature of sample used.

When polymerization is complete as indicated by opacity of sample and capping gels, the cover is removed and the chamber loaded into the buffer reservoirs. The apparatus and buffer are pre-cooled before a run and the run is made at about 5 C. or less. The power supply is set to give constant current which is set at 100-200 ma depending on the amount of sample and the size of the gel slab. A run takes 2-6 hours and at the end the tracking dye will have traversed nearly the whole slab.

After the run, the desired orgotein is found in the area comprising about -30 percent of the distance travelled by the tracking dye from the point of origin. It is well-separated from the much faster travelling albumin and albumin-type fractions and also well-' separated from the small amounts of much slower travclling extraneous protein fractions.

The desired orgotein is eluted from the gel by a crosscurrent of tris-maleate buffer 0.1 M containing 0.001 M Mg. Progress of the elution is monitored by UV. absorption at 280 mu. Uniformity is checked by analytical disc gel electrophoresis followed by staining with Amido Black. If desired, the albumin-type and the slow fractions can be recovered in a similar manner using tris-maleate buffer.

In the cationic system at pH 3.8 in the running gel, potassium ion is used as the leading ion and B-alanine as the trailing ion. Acetic acid is used as the buffer. The procedure followed with these systems is the same as that used with the anionic system (running gel pH 9.4).

To isolate the desired orgotein from the eluate, dialyze exhaustively against 0.001 M tris-maleate-Mg buffer and then against deionized water and lyophilize. A white fluffy powder representing about 6-16 percent of the ammonium sulfate or solvent precipitated product is obtained.

A typical overall yield of isolated orgotein is 0.005 to 0.015 percent, calculated on the dry weight of the original source material.

PREPARATION 3 All operations, unless otherwise indicated, are carried out in a cold room (2-5 C.).

PREPARATION Fresh beef liver is ground into a plastic container. Cold distilled water (two liters perkg of liver) is added with stirring and the mixture is adjusted with 0.1 N sodium hydroxide to pH 7.5 to 7.6. SufficientZM manganese sulfate solution is added to bring the molarity of 1 the mixture to 0.05. The pH is adjusted to 7.6 and fresh cold water is added to bring the water to three liters per.

kg of liver. Thereafter, 50 ml. of toluene per kg of liver are added and themixture is stirred. in the cold room overnight.

REMOVAL OF MORE SOLUBLE MATERIAL HEAT'LAB'ILE PROTEIN REMOVAL The siipe fiiat ant is heated rapidly to about 60 C. with stirring in a stainless steel or glass lined kettle and maintained at or close to 60 C. for about 20 minutes. Thereafter, the mixture is cooled to about 5 C. as rapidly as possible and the bulky precipitate is removed in the cold room by slow suction over a broad filter surface or by centrifugation. The clear solution is brought to 2-5 C. and 0.9 volume of denatured-ethanol (lO C.').is added from a reservoir through a glass tube extending well below the surface of the mixture. Effective stirring is essential and the temperature must remain at 5 C. or lower.

After the addition of the alcohol hasbeen completed,

the mixture is kept in the cold room just long enoughto permit the precipitate to compact and to settle. Thecold room. It represents a mixture of the desired orgotein, arginase and other enzymes, albumin and other non-essential proteins.

REMOVAL OF LESS SOLUBLE MATERIAL AND TRANSCI-IELATION For further processing, this powder is dissolved in about 12 times the volume of cold 0.2 M Tris 0.001 M Mg buffer, pH 7.8. This solution is treated with cold saturated ammonium solfate solution, 0.001 M in Mg. Five increments of 375 ml. each are added per 1,000 ml. of buffer solution. The respective states of saturation achieved by this technique are 15 percent, 30 percent, 45 percent, 60 percent and 75 percent. In each instance the addition of the ammonium sulfate solution is carried out slowly at 5 C. with stirring. Stirring is continued for another ten minutes and the resulting precipitate is collected by centrifuging at 4,500

rpms for thirty minutes at 0 C.

Of the five precipitates obtained, the first one (A) is discarded. It represents high-molecular weight-protein impurities. The second and third precipitates (B and C) are combined. They represent arginase and other enzymes which can be processed separately for the isolation of these products. The fourth and fifth (D and E) are also combined. They contain the desired orgotein, in a still crude state, contaminated with albumin and various other proteins both of lower and higher molecular weight. The final supernatant is discarded. It con-- tains low molecular proteins and other undesirable impurities.

CHROMATOGRAPHY Precipitates D and E are dissolved in 0.03 M Trisglycine 0.001 M Mg buffer, pH 7.8 at a concentration as close to percent (w/v) as possible and dialyzed against cold buffer until negative to sulfate ion.

The dialyzed solution is clarified by centrifugation and the supernatant is passed through a Millipore filter. The,

filtrate is applied directly to the head of a chromatography column (3 X 18 inches) filled with Sephadex G-100 (crosslinked dextran resin, Pharmacia, Sweden). The Sephadex has been swelled, defined and washed by standard techniques described in literature of the manufacturer. The packed column is equilibrated with 0.03 M Tris-glycine 0.001 M Mg buffer, pH 7.8 and adjusted to a flow rate of about 20 ml. per hour.

After application to the column, the sample is permitted to equilibrate within the first few cm of the resin bed for approximately 30-45 minutes when fractionation is started. Individual fractions of up to 10 ml. are collected. The emergence of peaks is determined by measuring the protein concentration by the absorbance at 280 millimicron.

Two and sometimes three peaks emerge from the column prior to the emergence of the desired orgotein. They represent albumin and other undesirable protein impurities of similar or larger molecular weight. Fractions representing these peaks are discarded. The de sired protein generally emerges in the range of 100-l50 ml of total eluate. These fractions are combined for further processing. Residual, lower molecular weight protein impurities emerge from the column on further elution, particularly on increasing the ionic strength of the buffer. They are removed to clear the column for a subsequent run.

BUFFER AND EXCESS Mg++ ION REMOVAL The combined fractions containing the desired orgotein are dialyzed against deionized H O 0.001 M Mg until they contain less than 10" M Tris buffer. Thereafter, dialysis is continued against deionized water containing 1 5 X 10 M ortho-phenanthroline or ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid salts until the concentration of Mg has been reduced to less than 10' M. If a protein chelate is desired whose predominant metal is other than magnesium, e.g., calcium, copper, iron or zinc, expose the protein after dialysis for about a da to a soluble salt of the metal of choice of a molarity which maintains the protein in solution, and then remove excess metal ion in the manner described above. The resultant solution is clarified by centrifuging and the supernatant is treated in either of two ways. For the preparation of bulk protein powder the solution is lyophilized. For the preparation of sterile protein solution for injection purposes, dextrose is added to the solution to 5 percent w/v. The dextrose solution is then sterilized by Millipore filtration and filtered into presterilized ampules or vials under sterile conditions to be used as such oras a lyophilized powder.

75 kg of fresh beef liver, which contains about percent water and is equivalent to about 22.5 kg of dry matter yields about 200 grams (lpercent) of the Mn chelate intermediate.

200 Grams of the Mn chelate yield 12.5 17.5 grams (0.06 0.08 percent) of combined D and E fractions. On Sephadex chromatography, these amounts of D- and E fractions yield. 2.4 to 2.9 grams of the desired protein, equivalent to an overall yield of 0.01 l 0.014 percent calculated on the dry weight of the liver.

PREPARATION 4f REMOVAL OF INSOLUBLE MATERIAL Finely macerated fresh beef liver is mixed with cold 0.025 M tris-glycine buffer containing 0.01 M Mn at pH 7.5 (two liters per kg of liver). Adjust pH to 7.5 if necessary. Thereafter, if the liver is fatty, 50 ml. of toluene per kg of liver are added. The mixture is stirred 4-6 hours. The resulting suspension is centrifuged at 20,000 G for 10-20 minutes or pressed through plastic gauze and the insolubles discarded.

REMOVAL OF MORE SOLUBLE MATERIAL To the aqueous filtrate obtained in the preceding step is added rapidly and with thorough agitation 1.25 volumes of cold acetone (1 0 C.) through a glass tube extending well 'belowthe surface of the mixture. The ensuing precipitate is immediately collected by centrifuging, e.g., for 10 minutes at 20,000 G. Completeness of precipitation is checked by adding an additional 0.25

to 0.50 volumes of acetone to the filtrate. Any additional precipitate is also collected. The precipitated proteins are quickly suspended with about 25 percent (V/V) of 0.025 M tris-glycine buffer at pH 7.5 containing 0.01 M Mn, calculated on the volume of the filtrate before addition of the acetone. The mixture is stirred in the cold room for several hours. The insolu bles are removed by centrifuging and the clear supernatant is adjusted to achieve an about 10 percent protein concentration. Protein concentration can be determined by Biuret analysis or other standard method.

HEAT LABILE PROTEIN REMOVAL The thus-obtained buffer solution is heated rapidly to about 60 C. with stirring in a stainless steel or glass lined kettle and maintained at or close to 60 C. for about 20 minutes. Thereafter, the mixture is cooled to about C. as rapidly as possible and the bulky precipitate is filtered in the cold room by slow suction over a broad filter surface or centrifuged at 12,000 to 16,000 G for minutes. The precipitate is re-extracted, using small amounts of cold buffer, and the clear supernatants combined. The precipitate is discarded.

REMOVAL OF LESS SOLUBLE MATERIAL AND TRANSCHELATION The solution from the heat treatment step is concentratcd, if necessary, to a protein concentration of about 8 percent, e.g., using an ion selective membrane (Diaflo Membrane, Amicon Corp., Cambridge, Mass.) to remove excess buffer. The protein solution is mixed slowly and with stirring with cold saturated ammonium sulfate solution containing 10 M Mg, 10 M Cu and 10 M Zn to a 45 percent (Ni-10 80 concentration. Stirring is continued for another minutes and the resulting precipitate is removed by centrifuging at 20,000 G for 30 minutes at 0 C. and discarded. To the filtrate is added an additional amount of the saturated ammonium sulfate solution to bring the protein solution to 65 percent (NH SO concentration. The resulting precipitate contains the desired protein and is collected by centrifugation or filtration. The final supernatant is discarded.

GEL FILTRATION The final precipitate from the (NI-T0 80 step is dissolved in 0.025 M tris-I-ICl or tris-glycine or 0.01 M phosphate or borate buffer, containing 10 M Mg, 10 M Cu and IO M Zn, at pH 7.8 to a concentration as close to 10 percent (w/v) as possible and dialyzed against cold buffer until negative to sulfate ion. The dialyzed solution, after clarification by centrifugation, if necessary, is passed through a Millipore filter. The filtrate is applied directly to the head of chromatography columns 3 X 18 in.) filled with Sephadex G-l00 or G-75 (epichlorohydrin cross-linked dextran resin, Pharmacia, Sweden). The Sephadex has been swelled, refined and washed by standard techniques described in literature of the manufacturer. The packed columns are equilibrated with one of the abovedcscribed buffers and adjusted to a flow rate of about 20 ml. per hour. The addition of 5-10 percent dextrose or sucrose to the solution improves uniformity of adsorption, which facilitates subsequent resolution.

After application to the column, the sample is permitted to equilibrate within the first few cm of the resin bed for approximately 30-45 minutes, at which time fractionation is started, the columnbeing developed with additional buffer solution. Individual fractions of up to 10 ml. are collected. The emergence of peaks is determined by measuring the protein concentration by the absorbance at 280 millimicron.

Two and sometimes three peaks emerge from the column prior to the emergence of the desired protein. They represent albumin and other undesirable protein impurities of similar or larger molecular volume. Fractions representing these peaks are discarded. The desired protein generally emerges in the range of 130-170 ml. of total eluate. These fractions are combined for further processing. Residual, lower molecular weight protein impurities emerge from the column on further elution, particularly on increasing the ionic strength of the buffer. They are removed to clear the column for a subsequent run.

BUFFER AND EXCESS Me ION REMOVAL The combined fractions containing the desired protein are filtered through a column of mixed bed resin Amberlite MB-l Monobed gel-type Ion Exchange Resin, (Rohm & Haas), a styrene-divinyl benzene strongly acidic (-SO strongly basic (-N (CH CH CH OH) group-containing mixed copolymer which reduces buffer, Mg, Cu and Zn ion concentration to less than 10 M.1: I

A column 1.45 X 45 inches is half filled with demineralized water from which all air bubbles have been removed. A slurry of the resin in air-free demineralized water is poured gently into the column and allowed to settle. The column is then back-washed severaltimes with demineralized water to constant pH (ca. 7.0) and ionic strength (conductance about 1.0 mho) of the effluent. The final bed height is 33 inches, giving a bed volume of 58.3 cubic inches (957 milliliters) and total exchange capacity of 440 milli-equivalents, based on a factor of 0.46 given by the manufacturer for this resin.

The fractions from the gel filtration step containing the desired protein are combined and concentrated, if necessary, to a protein content of 8-10 percent. This solution is carefully loaded onto the top of the column and thereafter developed with demineralized water.-

The flow rate is adjusted to about 20 milliliters perv minute and the appearance of the protein in'the eluate is monitored by ultraviolet absorption A The eluate iscollected in about 25 milliliter fractions. The. desired protein generally appears in the fourth to twelfth fractions. Buffer-Me concentration drops well below 10 M, as indicated by a drop of conductivity from 4,000 to 5,000 mho before column filtration to 1.5

2.5 mho thereafter.

For the preparation of a sterile protein solution for injection purposes, fructose, sucrose or other saccharide is added to the resulting buffer solution to a concentration of 2 parts saccharide per part protein. The solution is then sterilized by ultra-filtration and filtered into pre-sterilized ampoules or vialsiunder sterile conditions. The resulting product can then be lyophilized to produce a more stable product.

Following the above-described process, kg of fresh beef liver (22.5 kg dry weight), yields about 25-40v grams (0.12 0.17 percent) of final precipitate fromthe (NHQ SO step and 7 to 9 grams of the final, fully purified desired protein, equivalent to an overall yield of 0.032 0.041 percent calculated on the dry weight of the liver, a 300 or more percent increase in yield over that obtained by the process described in U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 576,454.

In an alternative procedure, the filtrate from Step (a), instead of being diluted with acetone, is first heated for about 20 minutes at or close to 60 C., then rapidly cooled to about 5 C. The resulting precipitate is removed by filtration or centrifugation and discarded. The filtrate is then treated with acetone as in Step (b). Step (c) is omitted. The precipitate obtained from the acetone treatment is dissolved in 0.025 M trisglycine buffer containing 10 M Mg, 10 M Cu, 10" M Zn at pH 7.5 adjusted if necessary to a protein concentration of about 8% and then treated as in Steps (d), (e) and (f).

PREPARATION 5 The following is an example of a process for the isolation of orgotein from red blood cells claimed in the application of W. Huber, U.S. Pat. Ser. No. 815,175, filed Apr. 10, 1969, now U.S. Pat. No. 3,579,495.

Fresh beef blood was centrifuged at 2,600 X G for 10 minutes at C. and the plasma decanted. The red cells were then washed repeatedly with 2 to 3 volumes of 0.9 percent saline solution. The washed red cells were hemolyzed by mixing with 1.1 volumes of cold deionized water containing 0.02 percent detergent (Saponin). After a minimum of 30 minutes at 4 C., 0.25 volume (per volume of hemolysate) of. ethyl alcohol at 15 C. was slowly added with stirring followed by 0.31 volume (per volume of hemolysate) of chloroform, also at 15? C. Stirring was continued for about l5.minutes at 5 C. or below, at which time the mixture was a thick paste. The hemoglobin precipitation was carried out in a cold bath which was kept at below C. After the paste had stood for a further minutes at 4 C.. 0.2 volume of cold 0.15 M NaCl solution was added, giving an easily poured suspension. The precipitate and excess chloroform were removed by centrifuging at 20,000 X G at about 10 C. for 10 minutes. The supernatant liquid was filtered and dialyzed against cold-deionized water. The dialyzed solution was lyophilized.

The alcohol-chloroform precipitate was re-extracted with a minimum amount of deionized water by blending the precipitate and water in a blender and centrifuging. Usually, a volume of water equal to that of the volume of starting red blood cell is needed. The reextraction'solution was dialyzed and lyophilized. Reextraction of the precipitated hemoglobin often yields 30-50 percent of protein mixture present in the original supernatant. Depending upon the structure of the precipitate, a second re-extraction may give an additional 10l5 percent.

The lyophilized material was re-dissolved in 0.025 M v tris-glycine buffer containing 0.001 M Mn at pH 7.5 (usually to a concentration of mg/ml). The solution was heated at or close to 65 C. for about 15 minutes. This step removes carbonic anhydrase and other heat labile enzymes from the solution. After heating, the solution was quickly cooled in an ice bathto about 5 C. The solution was then centrifuged at 20,000 X G at 0 C. for 10 minutes to remove the precipitate. The super natant was dialyzed against deionized water to remove excess metal ions and buffer and then lyophilized. The resulting solid is rich in orgotein.

GEL FILTRATION four to five times its volume. The Sephadex gel is stirred, allowed to settle, and the fines and supernatant removed by suction. Fresh buffer is again added to the swollen gel, and the above process repeated four times. The final suspension is chilled to 4 C. and then deaerated under reduced pressure before use.

A recirculating column made of polymethacrylate is used. The column is 1,050 mm long and has an internal diameter of 32 mm. In filling the column with degassed buffer, special care is taken to insure that no air bubbles are trapped near the filter and on the sides of the column. The buffer filled column is then moved into the cold room and clamped into a vertical position with the aid of a carpenters level. After equilibration in the cold room, the gel slurry is poured into a funnel connected to the top of the column with continued mechanical stirring. When a layer of Sephadex a few centimeters thick has formed on the bottom of the column, the outlet at the bottom of the column is opened to allow an even fiow. During the packing, a rising horizontal surface of gel in the tube indicates proper uniformity in packing. After approximately cm of gel has settled, the excess gel and buffer are removed. After the top surface of the gel has completely settled, the top of the column is closed with a plunger fitted with a filter disc. Buffer is then circulated through the column for two days in order to stabilize the bed. Flow rate is maintained at 10 ml. per hour. Final bed volume, V mh (3.14) (1.6 cm)(96.5 em) 775.7 cc.

The lyophilizate from the heating step is dissolved in buffer (20 mg/ml). lnsolubles, if present, are removed by centrifugation followed by Millipore filtrations. The clear solution is loaded on the column using an LKB selector valve (Model 491 1B).

All column runs are performed at 4 C. The buffer used is 0.05 M .HCl, pH 7.5, 0.15 M in KCl and 0.005

" M in glycine, containing 10* M Mg, 10 M Cu and 10 M Zn.

The protein solution is loaded from the bottom. Ascending buffer fiow rate is maintained at 10 ml. per hour. Protein content of fractions is determined by absorbance at 280 mp.

The elution volume for each protein can be monitored both volumetrically and gravimetrically.

If prior processing has proceeded normally, the first peak which emerges from the column is orgotein. It generally emerges in the range of 300-400 ml. of total eluate. These fractions are combined for further processing. Following the main, well defined peak is sometimes a shoulder which contains orgotein mixed with samll amounts of a minor impurity,which need not be separated- However, it can be separated by collecting the eluate fractions separately, and then further purified by recycling. Lower molecular weight protein impurities emerge from the column substantially later,- upon further elution. They are removed to clear the column for a subsequent run.

BUFFER ANDEXCESS METAL ION REMOVAL OH) group-containing mixed copoly ni'er which reduces bufferandunbound Mg q Cu and Zn ion concentrations to less than 10- M. Alternatively, this can bedone by dialysis. 

2. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 1 adapted for parenteral administration.
 3. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 2 adapted for intramuscular administration.
 4. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 1 wherein the orgotein is free from proteinaceous impurities.
 5. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 1 as a sterile, aqueous solution.
 6. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 5 wherein the solution contains 0.5 to 20 mg. of orgotein per 0.25 to 10 ml.
 7. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 5 wherein the solution is isotonic.
 8. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 1 adapted for topical administration.
 9. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 8 wherein the carrier is viscous liquid, semi-solid or solid. 